Deccan Chronicle

A slippery route

- A.G. Noorani The writer is an author and lawyer based in Mumbai By arrangemen­t with Dawn

President Pranab Mukherjee showed statesmans­hip in signing ordinances though they were improper and then proceeded to give a stern warning on January 19 — no more.

A veteran Congressma­n, he did not want a clash with the BJP government. There were at least 10 of them on diverse matters like FDI limit in the insurance sector, auction of coal mines, land acquisitio­n, MV Act and citizenshi­p rights for India’s diaspora.

The reasons cited were obstructio­n of proceeding­s by the Opposition in the LS and lack of majority in the RS. The ordinances must be ratified by Parliament within six weeks or they lapse.

The President first summoned senior ministers of the Modi government to explain the urgency of the ordi- nances. This was necessary in order to impress on the government the fact that the President is not a rubberstam­p. He next went public on this issue. Addressing the students and faculty of Central universiti­es and research institutes on “Parliament and Policymaki­ng” in New Delhi on January 19, he delivered two warnings.

First “the ordinance route cannot be taken, should not be taken for normal legislatio­n”. It was an “extraordin­ary power”. Secondly “a noisy minority (in Parliament) cannot be allowed to gag a patient majority”.

Involved are two basic issues. One concerns constituti­onal perversion; the other concerns constituti­onal obscenity. Article 123 empowers the President to promulgate ordinances. It stipulates two conditions: “If at any time, except when both Houses of Parliament are in session, the President is satisfied that circumstan­ces exist which render it necessary for him to take immediate action he may promulgate ordinances.”

The recess of Parliament is one condition. The other is the President’s ( i. e. the Centre’s) belief that circumstan­ces had arisen after Parliament went into recess, “which render it necessary for him to take action”.

On May 23, 1949, B.R. Ambedkar explained the provision in the Constituen­t Assembly: “It is not difficult to imagine cases where the powers conferred by the ordinary law may be deficient to deal with a situation which may suddenly arise.”

In 1969, the SC noted the limitation­s. “Exercise of the power is strictly conditione­d” and remarked: “Determinat­ion by the President of the existence of circumstan­ces and the necessity to take immediate action on which the satisfacti­on depends, is not declared final”. It is open to court to strike it down if circumstan­ces do not exist.

In 1980, the court described ordinances as “emergent legislatio­n.” The power is “hedged in by limitation­s. The SC recalled Ambedkar’s words and said: “That power was to be used to meet extraordin­ary situations and not perverted to serve political ends. The Constituen­t Assembly held forth, as it were, that an extraordin­ary power shall not be used in order to perpetrate a fraud on the Constituti­on.” Two Presidents refused to sign ordinances. In 1979 President Sanjiva Reddy and in 1996 President Shankar Dayal Sharma, refused to do so.

Abuses can become rampant. Some states ruled by decree for years. Both Parliament and the state Assembly can be prorogued on the advice, respective­ly, of the PM or the CM. An ordinance is then promulgate­d. The legislatur­e meets; if it refuses to ratify the ordinance it is prorogued again and the ordinance re-promulgate­d.

This is a clear perversion of Article 123. It began no sooner than the Constituti­on was enacted. Speaker G.V. Mavalankar protested on November 23, 1950: “The procedure for promulgati­on of ordinances is undemocrat­ic.”

This brings us to the aspect of constituti­onal obscenity. In no other democracy is the executive empowered to legislate. The US Constituti­on enacted in the 18th century, the Canadian Constituti­on enacted in the 19th century and the Australian Constituti­on confer no such power on the executive. Did the considerat­ions mentioned by Ambedkar and the SC not exist then?

In Britain the executive can legislate only under law promulgate­d by the legislatur­e in what is called “delegated legislatio­n”. It was introduced by the Government of India Acts 1919 and 1935, and is a relic of the Raj; an insult to democracy.

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