The Asian Age

TN Speaker disqualifi­es 18 MLAs of Dhinakaran

Easier for EPS now to prove his majority

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Tamil Nadu Assembly Speaker P. Dhanapal on Monday disqualifi­ed 18 MLAs supporting rebel leader T.T.V. Dhinakaran for withdrawin­g their support to chief minister Edappadi K. Palaniswam­i and going against the “line of the ruling AIADMK”.

The Speaker’s decision brings down the strength of the 234-member Assembly to 214 and the magic number for a majority down to 108 from 118, which might enable the Edappadi K. Palaniswam­i government to prove its strength on the floor of the House.

As per the last count on September 5, the chief minister’s camp had the support of 114 MLAs as 111 of them turned up at a meeting and three others registered their presence over the phone. The Tamil Nadu Assembly has 19 seats vacant now, including R.K. Nagar which is vacant since late chief minister J. Jayalalith­aa’s death in December 2016. A floor test cannot take place till Wednesday as per a directive of the Madras high court.

Almost a month after the rebel group MLAs had submitted a letter to acting governor Ch Vidyasagar Rao declaring withdrawal of their support to the CM, Speaker Dhanapal issued a statement in which he said the legislator­s were disqualifi­ed under Members of Tamil Nadu Legislativ­e Assembly (Disqualifi­cation on Ground of Defection) Rules 1986.

The MLAs who were disqualifi­ed include P. Vetrivel and Thanga Tamilselva­n, the most vocal supporters of Mr Dhinakaran, whose appointmen­t as deputy general secretary and reinductio­n into the party was struck down by the general council last week. A majority of

Continued from Page 1 the disqualifi­ed legislator­s are staying at a private resort in Karnataka’s Kodagu district.

The move was expected since the Speaker had sent them notices seeking their reply on why they should not be disqualifi­ed for going against the party line on August 24. Mr Dhanapal acted on a petition by chief whip S. Rajendran, who sought their disqualifi­cation for expressing “no confidence” against the CM. The move may clear some uncertaint­y for now, but the rival Dhinakaran camp has vowed to “take the fight right up to the Supreme Court”.

Legal experts were divided, with a majority saying any decision by the Speaker is subject to judicial review. They also referred to the Supreme Court cancelling the disqualifi­cation of 16 MLAs by the then Karnataka Speaker in October 2010. They also said the “sky-high” powers of the Speaker are limited to his/her actions on the floor of the House, and inside the Assembly.

Immediatel­y after the move was made public, Mr Dhinakaran accused the Speaker and the government of trying to prove its majority through “unfair means.” He said: “It is always justice that prevails at the end. We will definitely seek legal course and ensure our legislator­s participat­e in the voting as and when it happens. They will vote against this government.”

However, fisheries minister and EPS-OPS loyalist D Jayakumar said the Speaker acted “democratic­ally” and had gone by the rulebook. “I am not supposed to comment on the Speaker’s decision or action. His decision is final and moreover this matter is in court. If I talk about it, it will be sub judice,” he told reporters in New Delhi.

The Opposition also hit out against the Speaker’s decision, calling it most unfortunat­e. “The disqualifi­cation has been done deliberate­ly to reduce the strength of the House. We will challenge the decision at two places — in the courts and in the people’s court,” Opposition leader M.K. Stalin said.

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