The Free Press Journal

Unseemly spat

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Public sparring between the executive and the higher judiciary is highly avoidable. But as the proceeding­s of the National Law Day function last week revealed, turf wars are difficult to avoid when there is no impartial referee to demarcate the divide. Neither side to the dispute is innocent. Law Minister Rabi Shankar Prasad revealed that he is still smarting under the rejection of the National Judicial Appointmen­ts Commission which was passed by Parliament unanimousl­y. The stalemate over the framing of the proposed Memorandum of Procedure for such appointmen­ts remains in limbo long after the rejection of the NJAC. This speaks of the seemingly unbridgeab­le distance between the two vital wings of the Constituti­on. Thanks to the instrument­ality of PIL, the judiciary has shown no compunctio­n in steeping on the toes of the executive, though it was the sheer recklessne­ss of the Indira Gandhi administra­tion in appointing ‘committed’ judges that finally caused the apex court to seize the upper hand in judicial appointmen­ts. Relations between judiciary and executive have grown more fraught since then. Only an unlikely confluence of sagacious minds at the head of the respective institutio­ns can end the impasse. For the smooth working of the Constituti­on, it is important that the judiciary and the executive work out a modus vivendi till their relations can be put on a firmer footing.

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