Hindustan Times (Delhi)

SC refuses to interfere in Raj HC order on speaker

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Though the court did not go into the question of the correctnes­s of the speaker’s decision to issue notice and if the actions of the Pilot camp amounted to giving up the membership of the Congress party, justice Mishra observed during the hearing that “voice of dissent cannot be suppressed… then democracy will shut”.

“After all they have been elected by the people. Can they not express their dissent? Can voice of dissent be shut down like this in a democracy?” he told senior counsel Kapil Sibal, who was representi­ng the speaker.

Proceeding­s in the high court will resume at 10.30am on Friday. It is expected to pronounce its verdict later in the day.

Thursday’s order could be a major boost to the Pilot camp — if the high court on Friday bars the speaker from disqualify­ing the 19 MLAS, they will remain protected from such proceeding­s until the top court has reached its verdict. It may, meanwhile, hamper the Gehlot government from calling an assembly session — fearing a no-confidence motion from the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) — because the numbers in the House are still tenuous for the chief minister.

Speaking to reporters on Thursday evening, however, Gehlot said an assembly session would be called “soon”.

As things stand, Gehlot appears to have the support of 101 members —the majority mark in the 200-member state assembly (though this does not include speaker CP Joshi). Pilot has 18 other Congress MLAS and three independen­ts in his camp, taking his tally to 22. The BJP and its ally Rashtriya Loktrantri­k Party have 75 seats. One Congress MLA, Bhanwarlal Meghwal, is indisposed, though he is said to be close to Pilot. If Pilot’s tally is added to that of the opposition alliance, it takes their number up to 97. This means a three-member swing from the Gehlot camp to the Pilot camp or to the BJP could lead to the government falling in the event of a no-confidence motion.

Conversely, if the high court allows the speaker to go ahead with the proceeding­s and disqualify the MLAS — Gehlot will then be more confident in calling an assembly session and proving his majority through a trust vote — the rebels led by Pilot will have legal recourse to challenge the order through a petition in the Supreme Court. The speaker has so far been asked by the high court not to take any decision until after its verdict on Friday.

Sibal sought for a stay on the proceeding­s and the July 21 order of the high court reserved the judgment till Friday. When the court appeared disincline­d to grant the prayer, Sibal alternativ­ely sought for the matter before the high court to be transferre­d to the Supreme Court. This, too, was rejected by the court.

But the larger legal question argued in the court emanating from the Rajasthan developmen­ts was whether the high court oversteppe­d its jurisdicti­on by “directing” the speaker to not proceed on the disqualifi­cation proceeding­s.

Sibal submitted that the “court cannot direct speaker to extend time (to decide the disqualifi­cation proceeding­s). Court cannot interfere till the speaker gives a decision”. “It is settled by the judgment of this court in Kihoto Hollohan of 1992,” he said.

In Kihoto Hollohan’s case, a five-judge Constituti­on bench held that judicial review should not cover any stage prior to the making of a decision by the speaker/chairman. No interferen­ce would be permissibl­e at an interlocut­ory stage of the proceeding­s, the court had said.

Justice Mishra asked whether the speaker can muzzle dissent within party by using his powers of disqualifi­cation.

“We are trying to find out whether the procedure adopted (by speaker) is correct or not. Can voice of dissent be shut down like this in a democracy?” he asked.

Sibal, however, replied that courts cannot go into the merits of the speaker’s actions before the speaker gives a decision.

Senior counsels Harish Salve and Mukul Rohatgi, representi­ng the Pilot camp, questioned the speaker’s decision to approach the Supreme Court after participat­ing in the hearings before the high court for three days.

Experts said the Tenth Schedule and the anti-defection law needed examinatio­n.

“The role of the speaker has to be reconsider­ed. As it stands today, if the Kihoto Hollohan judgment is applied literally, the speaker’s actions, even if they are completely without authority or jurisdicti­on, cannot be touched by courts till the speaker actually gives a decision.this could lead to the speaker oversteppi­ng his jurisdicti­on and issuing notices time and again,” said Alok Prasanna Kumar, senior resident fellow at Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy.

Senior counsel Sanjay Hegde said: “The crucial thing the Supreme Court has done by keeping matter pending, is in a sense to immobilise the speaker till Monday. Even if Rajasthan high court dismisses the petition, its final judgment is not to be implemente­d till SC hears petition on Monday.” year 1976, when the population of Delhi was 60 lakh. Population of Delhi as per Census 2011 stands at 167 lakh (1.67 crore) and the projected population as per projection in Master Plan Delhi 2021 is 250 lakh (2.5 crore),” said a release from the chief minister’s office on August 1, 2018, when the Gosain panel’s report was submitted.

According to the release, the main recommenda­tions were to ensure there are no encroachme­nts on such drains, sewage is routed through separate sewage channels, dumping of constructi­on and demolition debris is stopped, effective de-silting is carried out and that new stormwater drains are designed and built in such a way that existing run-off estimates and architectu­re are taken into account.

“The document is circulated among various department­s who pass their judgment and drainage work is given in bits and pieces by the government to contractor­s. The drainage plan is ahead of its time and cannot be comprehend­ed by contractor­s,” said Gosain in an interview to HT.

Representa­tives of the Delhi government did not respond to requests sent on Thursday for comments on the status of the plan.

Two other experts supported Gosain’s assessment of the situation.

“Delhi’s groundwate­r recharging area has reduced drasticall­y because of concretisa­tion in the form of roads, paved pedestrian paths, buildings. Where will rain water from a very large surface area go? It will come on to the highways where underpasse­s don’t have proper drainage. Where they have drainage, it’s not cleaned, it’s choked with plastic,” said CR Babu, professor emeritus at the Centre for Environmen­t Management of Degraded Ecosystems at Delhi University.

“Tree cover along highways can help. They can slow the way rain water falls on the ground and open ground can then be recharged with it,” he added.

Manu Bhatnagar, principle director, Natural Heritage Division, INTACH, said: “Unusual flooding is because of very poor engineerin­g and too much paved hard surface. The converse of waterloggi­ng is water harvesting. Even on top of the Barapullah elevated road, water was standing after rain. This shows poor planning and maintenanc­e.”

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