The Free Press Journal

EC DEFERS BY-POLLS TO LET SC DECIDE

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In a sort of victory for the disqualifi­ed Karnataka MLAs, the Election Commission on Thursday deferred the byelection­s for 15 Assembly seats on October 21, letting the Supreme Court take a call on their petitions challengin­g then Speaker’s decision debarring them from contesting during the current House tenure.

The EC’s decision came on the second day of hearing on Thursday on the MLAs’ petitions when the Court announced not to pass any interim order to stay the byelection­s as sought by them, and fixed further hearing only on October 22.

Senior advocate Rakesh Dwivedi offered to defer the 15 by-elections “for sometime” on behalf of the Election Commission just as the Bench of Justices N V Ramana, Sanjiv Khanna and Krishna Murari declared not to stay the by-elections but hear the batch of petitions challengin­g their disqualifi­cation by then Speaker K R Ramesh Kumar.

When the Bench asked him whether his statement should be recorded in the order, he said: “We will certainly do it.” He obviously had brief from the Election Commission but he did not make it explicit in the course of the second day of the hearing, waiting for the Court’s decision on the prayer to stay the by-election.

On Wednesday, Dwivedi had asserted that the former Speaker’s order disqualify­ing the MLAs cannot deprive them of their right to contest the by-elections. Then Speaker’s senior advocate Kapil Sibal protested, noting that the Speaker’s order is explicit that no disqualifi­ed MLA can be a member of the present Assembly.

The lawyers appearing for the disqualifi­ed MLAs, Congress leader Siddaramai­ah, and other respondent­s said that they have no objection if the by-polls are deferred.

Fifteen seats were vacated after the disqualifi­cation of the rebel Congress-Janata Dal (Secular) MLAs following their resignatio­n from their respective parties. The then Assembly Speaker KR

The lawyers appearing for the disqualifi­ed MLAs, Congress leader Siddaramai­ah, and other respondent­s said that they have no objection if the by-polls are deferred

Ramesh Kumar had disqualifi­ed 17 MLAs — 13 belonging to the Congress, three from the JDS, and one independen­t, which eventually led to the fall of the Congress-JD(S) coalition government headed by the then chief minister HD Kumaraswam­y in July.

Kumaraswam­y resigned as chief minister after losing the trust vote, paving the way for the installati­on of the BJP government with BS Yediyurapp­a as the chief minister.

The disqualifi­ed lawmakers have approached the apex court, challengin­g Kumar’s decision to disqualify them. In their pleas, they have contended that the decision taken by Kumar before resigning as Speaker was an entirely illegal, arbitrary and mala fide exercise of his power under the 10th Schedule of the Constituti­on.

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