Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Maharashtr­a: A flawed decision

President’s rule is hasty. The governor should have waited

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On Tuesday afternoon, based on a recommenda­tion by the governor of Maharashtr­a, Bhagat Singh Koshiyari, the Union government decided to recommend the imposition of President’s rule in the state. The President signed off on this later in the evening. The governor’s office said he was satisfied that a government in the state could not be carried on in accordance with the Constituti­on. This, then, entailed the use of Article 356, which brings the state under central rule. The state’s political theatre has indeed been fluid. Close to three weeks after the assembly election results came out, no government has been formed. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) said it did not have the numbers when it could not muster the support of the Shiv Sena. The Sena could not get letters of support from the Nationalis­t Congress Party (NCP) and the Congress in the time allotted to it to stake claim. And it was not clear if the NCP, which had been asked by the governor to show if it had adequate support, would have the numbers either. Yet, the governor’s report was politicall­y unsound and legally questionab­le. To be sure, the governor has discretion, especially in a political context where no party or alliance has an outright majority, but this discretion has to be used wisely. His task is to exhaust all possibilit­ies of government formation before recommendi­ng the use of Article 356. In Maharashtr­a, this was not the case. The possibilit­ies of an alliance government were alive, and the political process should have been allowed to take its course. There may have been delays, but negotiatio­ns among possible partners — the Sena, NCP, and Congress — were still in progress. While the governor gave 48 hours to the BJP, he gave 24 hours to the Sena, and, in effect, less than 16 hours to the NCP, to show the letters of support. A level playing field would have been more just. Indeed, both the Sena and the NCP did ask for more time — 48 hours. There may have eventually been an impasse, which would have necessitat­ed President’s rule. But the process with which it has been done now is hasty, leading to questions about the governor’s impartiali­ty and a suit in the Supreme Court. The BJP, at the Centre, should have waited too, for the current decision can be seen as a move to keep rivals out.

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