FrontLine

Danger of being a ‘glorified cipher’

- BY K.P. SETHUNATH

The disagreeme­nts between the Governor and the Kerala government over the past two and a half years have not helped improve Centre-state

relations in any meaningful manner.

KERALA HAS THE DUBIOUS DISTINCTIO­N OF being one of the first States to be mentioned in connection with Centre-state relations and the constituti­onal role of Governors. This is because of Governor Burgula Ramakrishn­a Rao’s decision in 1959 to dismiss the first democratic­ally elected State government invoking Article 356 of the Constituti­on. Nearly 63 years later, debates continue on the constituti­onal propriety of Governor Rao’s recommenda­tion to the Union government to dismiss an elected State government. Opinions remain divided, but there is unanimity that he set the precedent for making Article 356 one of the most abused provisions of the Constituti­on.

Gubernator­ial avatars across the country seem to relish the legacy left by B.R. Rao despite well-known legal luminaries speaking about the limits to the functional autonomy of Governors. Arif Mohammed Khan, the current Kerala Governor, is a prime example of this. He seems to believe in the dictum that a Governor is dutybound to maintain a ‘discipline and punish’ approach vis-a-vis the State government.

After taking charge as Governor in September 2019, Arif Khan has not lost a single opportunit­y to question the State government on contentiou­s political issues, disregardi­ng the constituti­onal propriety of his position as head of thestate. The first tiff with the State government took place when he vociferous­ly defended the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act (CAA) passed by the Union government in December 2019. The State Assembly passed a resolution demanding that the Act be scrapped. The Governor took umbrage at the resolution and said it had no “legal or constituti­onal validity”.

Before that he created a stir at the inaugural session of the Indian History Congress on the Kannur University campus when he chose to put aside the written text of his speech to harangue some speakers who had expressed their displeasur­e with the CAA and the general political situation in the country. A section of the participan­ts registered their protest, and the police forcibly tried to remove them, prompting the well-known historian Prof. Irfan Habib to call for the removal of the police from the auditorium. The Governor, however, charged Prof. Habib with trying to ‘heckle’ him and ‘disrupt his speech’. Prof. Habib said he wanted to tell the Kannur University officials to ask the police to leave the auditorium as he was incensed that they were given a free entry to the inaugural venue, which was unheard of in the history of Indian History Congresses.

SPECIAL SESSION OF THE ASSEMBLY

Another major episode in the tussle between the Governor and the State government was with regard to the nationwide farmers’ agitation against the three farm laws passed by the Union government. The State Cabinet wanted to convene a special one-day session of the Assembly to discuss the laws on December 23, 2020. The

Assembly session was originally scheduled for January 8, 2021, according to the permission sought by the government on December 17, 2020. The Governor questioned the need for convening the Assembly at such a short notice.

It is true that the State government handled the issue in a clumsy manner which gave the Governor an opportunit­y to score political points. The government seeking permission for a special one-day session to be convened early invited the Governor’s wrath.

Arif Khan conceded that the “Governor is bound by the decision of the Cabinet” on summoning the Assembly under rule 3 (2) of the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in the Kerala Legislativ­e Assembly. At the same, he stated: “It became clear that this special session was to discuss a problem for which you have no jurisdicti­on to offer any solution.” He also stated that the government had not provided any answer to the specific questions raised by him on the need for convening an emergency session of the Assembly.

Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan termed the Governor’s refusal to convene the special session as anti-constituti­onal and said he had no discretion­ary power to refuse to convene or adjourn an Assembly session. The stand-off was resolved with the Governor agreeing to convene a special session on December 31 in response to the State government’s fresh request.

APPOINTMEN­T OF VICE CHANCELLOR­S

The Governor and the State government locked horns over policy matters again soon after Pinarayi Vijayan assumed office for a second term in May 2021. The appointmen­t of Vice Chancellor­s to the State universiti­es was the point of contention this time. The simmering discontent came out in the open with Arif Khan writing to the State government that he was not willing to continue as Chancellor of universiti­es in the State without any real power. “I am not interested in being the symbolic head,” he said and expressed his willingnes­s to legally transfer all powers of the Chancellor to the Pro-chancellor, who is also the State’s Higher Education Minister. He stated that he did not want to be a party to irregular appointmen­ts for the sake of avoiding conflicts with the government. The issued hogged headlines for a few weeks before the Chief Minister intervened to resolved it.

In February this year, the Governor literally held the State government to ransom by refusing assent to the customary Governor’s speech until the last moment. He refused to sign the speech demanding action against K.R. Jyothilal, Principal Secretary, General Administra­tion Department, for the remarks he had made in connection with the appointmen­t of a personal staff member of the Governor. The government had no option but to concede to the demand by replacing Jyothilal with another official.

PERSONAL STAFF OF MINISTERS

As the dust settled on this matter, Arif Khan raised the issue of Cabinet Ministers keeping a large number of personal staff members who became eligible for pension after serving for less than three years. “In Kerala, they [personal staff] are entitled to pension benefits after only two years in service. One set of people is made to retire after two years and a new set of people is hired. They are all party people and financed by the State exchequer,” he said. The Governor alleged that the practice provided an opportunit­y for political parties to keep their cadres happy at the cost of taxpayers’ money.

SARKARIA COMMISSION RECOMMENDA­TIONS

The conflict between the Governor and the State government in the past two and a half years has not enriched Union-state relations in any meaningful manner. The Governor’s actions were also against the spirit of the Sarkaria Commission recommenda­tions on Centre-state relations. The Commission has defined the position of the Governor in the constituti­onal scheme without much scope for ambiguity. Chapter IV of the report titled ‘Role of the Governor’ says: “...Article 163 does not give the Governor a general discretion­ary power to act against or without the advice of his Council of Ministers. The area for the exercise of his discretion is limited. Even in this limited area, his choice of action should not be arbitrary or fanciful. It must be a choice dictated by reason, actuated by good faith and tempered by caution.”

Tracing the genealogy of the confrontat­ions between Governors and State government­s, the Commission pointed out that the problems arose mainly after 1967 when the opposition parties came to power in many States replacing the Congress. The report says: “In a number of States, the party in power was different from that in the Union. The subsequent decades saw the fragmentat­ion of political parties and emergence of new regional parties. Frequent, sometimes unpredicta­ble, realignmen­ts of political parties and groups took place for the purpose of forming government­s. These developmen­ts gave rise to chronic instabilit­y in several State government­s. As a consequenc­e, the Governors were called upon to exercise their discretion­ary powers more frequently. The manner in which they exercised these functions has had a direct impact on Union-state relations. Points of friction between the Union and the States began to multiply.”

A similar situation prevails in the country today, with a number of States having government­s headed by parties other than the Bharatiya Janata Party. Governors appointed by the Union government in such States are attempting to prove their loyalty to their political masters in Delhi, causing irreparabl­e damage to constituti­onal propriety and institutio­nal decorum. The Sarkaria Commission’s recommenda­tion not to appoint a politician of the ruling party at Centre in an opposition-ruled State deserves serious considerat­ion at this juncture. “It is desirable that a politician from the ruling party at the Union is not appointed as Governor of a State which is being run by some other party or a combinatio­n of other parties,” the Commission report says. m K.P. Sethunath is the editor of The Malabar Journal.

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