Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

The SC puts the onus on AAP

The government must now find solutions for the city’s problems

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For years now, Delhi’s citizens have had to put up with the refrain that the problems that plague the city (and many do) can’t be addressed by its elected government because the Lieutenant Governor (LG) won’t allow it to. On Wednesday, a five-judge bench of the Supreme Court headed by the Chief Justice of India did its bid to resolve the impasse.

The apex court did not strike down a previous Delhi High Court verdict that gave the LG more powers. But it emphasised the need for collective responsibi­lity — on the part of the LG and the ministers — for the effective administra­tion of Delhi. The verdict lays down and interprets the constituti­onal contours governing the relationsh­ip between the LG and the elected government.

The Aam Aadmi Party’s (AAP) response to the judgement has been celebrator­y, but while the court has acknowledg­ed the primacy of the elected government of Delhi over the LG in the administra­tion of the national capital, it is not as though it has handed the elected government untrammell­ed powers. The Centre, and, by extension, the LG, retains the power to legislate on the issues of land, law and order and police. Still, the court has said the LG has to act on the aid and advice of the council of ministers and does not enjoy any independen­t decision-making power. Clearing the air surroundin­g the roles of the elected government and the LG, the court ruled that the “status of NCT of Delhi is sui generis, a class apart, and the status of the Lieutenant Governor of Delhi is not that of a Governor of a State, rather he remains an administra­tor, in a limited sense, working with the designatio­n of Lieutenant Governor”. The seeds of this confusion between the LG and the elected government were sown by the 69 constituti­onal amendments in 1991 that created a legislativ­e assembly and made a national capital of Delhi. While the idea of the amendment was to give a larger say to the people of Delhi in its governance, it gave rise to friction between the elected government and the LG.

The elected government in Delhi may have more authority than it has had of late. But with power comes responsibi­lity. It should have no further excuse to not get down to working on and finding solutions to problems that plague the capital.

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