The Asian Age

Top court raps Arunachal gov

- J. VENKATESAN

The Supreme Court on Tuesday faulted the Arunachal Pradesh governor for sending an agenda to the Speaker to be discussed in the Assembly session relating to disqualifi­cation of 14 rebel Congress MLAs and said he had no business to send such a message.

A five- judge Constituti­on bench comprising Justices J. S. Khehar, Dipak Misra, Madan B. Lokur, Pinaki Chandra Ghose and N. V. Ramana made it clear to the counsel for the 14 MLAs that under the Constituti­on, the governor had a limited role in Assembly proceeding­s and this was to ensure that democracy survives.

The bench told the counsel that the governor seemed to have exceeded his constituti­onal brief by advancing the Assembly session, from January 14 to December 16, 2015, to decide the disqualifi­cation of 14 rebel Congress MLAs and the resignatio­n of two MLAs who had subsequent­ly retracted their resignatio­n. Justice Khehar observed that it is only the Speaker who is empowered under the Constituti­on to decide the disqualifi­cation of MLAs under the anti- defection law and the governor has no role to play in it.

“The governor’s message interferes with the legislativ­e process on the compositio­n of the House? Compositio­n is not within his realm. He ( governor) is interferin­g. He is interferin­g in the 10th schedule ( anti- defection law) if he is sending such a message. This message changes the compositio­n. Speaker is an independen­t person, he is elected by a majority. You are saying he ( governor) is not interferin­g. But when you say don’t change the compositio­n, then you are interferin­g in the legislativ­e functions of the House.”

Senior counsel Rakesh Dwivedi cited precedents when the governor had sent message on his own.

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