The Sun (Malaysia)

Who should appoint judges?

- BY GURDIAL SINGH NIJAR

informally including consultati­ons with eminent senior lawyers and the Bar Council.

All this changed drasticall­y under the leadership of Tun Abdul Hamid Mohamad. Thereafter, except for some transient moments, by and large it was a rapid descent down a slippery slope, climaxing in Najib’s appointmen­t of Raus and Tan Sri Zulkefli Ahmad Makinudin as heads of the judiciary.

This judicial nadir provides the impetus for the present government to insulate the judiciary from political influence. A commendabl­e move indeed. But how?

The proposal is for a Parliament­ary Select Committee (PSC) to vet candidates for judicial positions before their names are then submitted to the King, to cull the absolute power of the prime minister in making the appointmen­ts.

The PH Manifesto promise 19 states: The power of the prime minister to influence the appointmen­t of judges will be removed so that there can be no abuse of power. Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad said: “Judges do not have to be afraid to carry out their duties fairly.”

The proposal has received mixed reaction from lawyers and civil society.

It erodes, they say, the “separation of powers” doctrine whereby any improper action of the executive and legislatur­e can be challenged; and put right by the judiciary.

This may be compromise­d if the legislatur­e has influence in recommendi­ng the appointmen­t and promotion of judges.

Some propose that the JAC be given independen­t status guaranteed by the Constituti­on.

This still begs the cardinal question: who will appoint members to the JAC? The PH manifesto wants this done by the PSC.

The UK’s JAC comprises 15 commission­ers, 12 of whom are appointed through open competitio­n. The other three are selected from among judges by the judges’ council.

In India the appointmen­t of judges is by a collegium system, establishe­d by a 1993 landmark Supreme Court judgment: Supreme Court Advocate-on-Record Associatio­n v Union of India.

The chief justice along with two (later increased to four) senior-most judges of the court recommend the names for the appointmen­t.

The executive must give effect to the recommenda­tion. The executive can question the recommenda­tion once. Thereafter, if the same decision is reached by the collegium again that will be declared final.

Declared the court: “The role of chief justice is primal in nature because this being a topic within the judicial family, the executive cannot have an equal say in the matter.”

The constituti­onal provision requiring the president for “consultati­on” with the chief justice and other judges should be understood as “concurrenc­e”, the court ruled.

Later attempts to replace the collegium system by a JAC comprising several members of the executive and legislatur­e, were struck down as unconstitu­tional, on the grounds that “(I)t is difficult to hold that the wisdom of appointmen­t of judges can be shared with the political-executive. In India, the organic developmen­t of civil society has yet not evolved. The expectatio­n from the judiciary to safeguard the rights of the citizens of this country can only be ensured by keeping it absolutely independen­t from the other organs of governance”.

By contrast, in the US, the president nominates judges and must get the approval of the Senate because members of Parliament have to report back to the people; justices do not.

It’s a question of accountabi­lity, especially since courts and judges are seen as distanced from the aspiration­s of a new government seeking to effect transforma­tional changes.

The courts wittingly or otherwise can, by their decisions, settle controvers­ies over constituti­onal values. This saps democracy of its vitality.

Too often the decisions have muted the voice of the people in what former president Barack Obama termed the “essential democratic conversati­on” – and closed off avenues to desperatel­y needed change. An experience we share in Malaysia.

Witness how our courts summarily dismissed actions brought in respect of the Election Commission’s manipulati­on of the electoral roll and boundaries just before the 14th general election. The prime minister reiterated his proposal last week in Parliament.

The challenge now posed: how to insulate the judiciary from any interferen­ce by other organs of government while concomitan­tly ensuring it does not impede the transforma­tional aspiration­s of a new government. This finally resolves into: who should appoint the judiciary?

Gurdial Singh Nijar, a former University of Malaya law professor, currently practises law. Comments: letters@thesundail­y.com

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