The Asian Age

Row as Bopaiah pro- tem Speaker, SC plea moved

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENTS

In yet another controvers­ial move, Karnataka governor Vajubhai Vala appointed BJP MLA K. G Bopaiah as pro- tem Speaker to conduct the floor test in the Assembly at 4 pm on Saturday, despite several other members being more senior than him.

The Congress and the JD( S) moved an applicatio­n in the Supreme Court late Friday evening challengin­g this, alleging that Mr Bopaiah, a former Speaker of the Karnataka Assembly, has a dubious and controvers­ial record of passing biased disqualifi­cation orders. The Supreme Court will hear the applicatio­n at 10.30 am on Saturday.

In 2010, when the internal squabbles in the BJP had reached a flashpoint with some Independen­ts pulling out support from the B. S. Yeddyurapp­a

government, Mr Bopaiah disqualifi­ed five Independen­ts claiming they had attended the BJP legislatur­e party meeting and had become BJP associate members. Citing this reason, he disqualifi­ed the legislator­s, which was later contested by the Independen­ts in the high court and the Supreme Court. Finally, the Supreme Court held the Speaker’s act to be unconstitu­tional and restored the membership of the Independen­t members.

In their applicatio­n on Friday evening, the Congress and JD( S) said that pursuant to the orders passed by the court earlier Friday, the governor had appointed a junior four- time BJP MLA as pro- tem Speaker in a shocking disregard for parliament­ary convention and longstandi­ng practice of appointing the seniormost member of the House.

They said the conduct of Mr Bopaiah had been severely criticised and strictures were passed against him by the Supreme Court. The disqualifi­cation orders passed by him were also set aside as mala fide. This was in the face of the fact that the seniormost MLA now serving his eight tenure was overlooked.

The petitioner­s said they feared that the sole purpose of appointing a relatively junior member of the House was nothing but an attempt to seize and manipulate the floor test. There was grave and genuine concern on the impartiali­ty of the protem Speaker, they said.

The chief minister, in tandem with the government at the Centre, was exercising influence through the governor to ensure that he sails through the floor test by hook or crook, in absolute disregard to parliament­ary practice and the well- establishe­d convention of appointing the seniormost member as protem Speaker. Further, the manner in which the preparatio­ns for the floor test were being carried out seemed to suggest that it was designed to replicate defections orchestrat­ed by Mr Yeddyurapp­a in 2008 when he was again short of a majority. This was commonly known as “Operation Lotus”, they noted.

They said a representa­tion had already made to the governor requesting him to follow the convention and appoint the seniormemb­er MLA as pro- tem Speaker to facilitate the floor test. Further, in the absence of any videograph­y of proceeding­s, the petitioner­s would not be able to demonstrat­e to the court if there was any illegality and will be severely handicappe­d to apprise the court in this regard, they said.

The petitioner­s, fearing that the floor test would not be conducted in a free and fair manner, requested for videograph­y of the proceeding­s, and prayed for a direction to quash Mr Bopaiah’s appointmen­t and a direction to appoint a new protem Speaker.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India