The Asian Age

Court gives Pilot, dissident MLAs 4-day breather

Speaker’s action on hold till Tuesday

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Jaipur, July 17: Sachin Pilot and 18 other Congress dissident MLAs on Friday got a four-day reprieve from any action by the Assembly Speaker on the disqualifi­cation notices served on them, after the Rajasthan high court extended its hearing on the issue to next week.

The division bench of the court, hearing the dissident MLAs’ petition against the Speaker’s notices, adjourned Friday evening. It fixed the next hearing for 10 am on Monday.

The counsel for the Speaker assured the court that no order shall be passed on the notice till 5.30 pm on Tuesday.

Earlier, Speaker C.P. Joshi had written to the court that the notices would not be acted upon till 5 pm on Friday. The counsel agreed to extend this to 5.30 pm on Tuesday as the court is yet to give an order on the petition.

Harish Salve and Mukul Rohatgi argued for the petitioner­s via video conference.

Abhishek Manu Singhvi was among those who argued on behalf of the Speaker.

“It was argued that Speaker’s powers are autonomous and he has issued show-cause notices. The judiciary should not interfere till the order on the notices is passed. The argument by Singhvi will resume on Monday at 10 am,” another counsel for the Speaker told reporters after the hearing.

The petition had challenged the notices based on a Congress complaint that the MLAs should be disqualifi­ed from the Rajasthan Assembly for defying a party whip.

The bench of Chief Justice Indrajit Mahanty and Justice Prakash Gupta also asked Congress chief whip Mahesh Joshi, who had filed the complaint before the Speaker, to respond to the dissidents’ petition by Saturday. Mr Joshi was

■ Continued from Page 1 impleaded in the petition today. The Pilot camp has argued that a party whip applies only when the Assembly is in session.

In its complaint to the Speaker, the Congress had sought action against Mr Pilot and the other dissidents under paragraph 2 (1) (a) of the Tenth Schedule of the Constituti­on.

The provision disqualifi­es MLAs if they “voluntaril­y” give up the membership of the party which they represent in the House.

The Congress claims that this is the inference that can be drawn from the MLAs’ conduct. But the dissident camp says in its petition that Sachin Pilot never indicated any intention to leave the party.

In the writ petition, the petitioner­s said that they have been elected on Congress ticket and have allegiance to the party and not seeking to defect to any other party.

“By way of the instant notice, the voice of the petitioner­s seeking a leadership change within the party, expressed in the most democratic manner, is sought to be stifled and the petitioner­s are threatened with abdication of their right to express their reservatio­ns about the functionin­g of such leadership,” the petition states. “The undue haste and swiftness exhibited by the authority concerned in taking cognisance of the said complaint leaves no doubt in the minds of the petitioner­s that the move is aimed at arriving at a foregone conclusion leading to the disqualifi­cation of the petitioner­s,” it added. The petitioner­s said any grievances regarding the functionin­g of the government were not tolerated by the chief minister. The dissidents said that sensing a brewing discontent, the chief minister had called a legislatur­e party meeting on July 13 without providing any specific agenda and levelled certain baseless allegation­s against them.

Subsequent­ly, they were issued notices by chief whip Mahesh Joshi for not attending the meeting, said the petition.

The petitioner­s also said that the chief minister ordered an inquiry by the Special Operations Group of the Rajasthan Police to investigat­e the petitioner­s which, they said, was no more than a ploy to threaten them and other MLAs against raising their voice against the inefficien­cy of the leadership.

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Sachin Pilot

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