Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

A political tussle is now judicial

Thanks to all the bungling, the Uttarakhan­d crisis has now become a constituti­onal problem

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The crisis in Uttarakhan­d, which has arisen as a result of the dismissal of the democratic­ally-elected government, led by Harish Rawat, has many points of significan­ce, none of which is healthy for India’s body politic. What was a political crisis has turned into a legal and a constituti­onal anomaly, in the sense that the judiciary has had to step into the domain of the legislatur­e, something that is not in consonance with the constituti­onal tenet of the separation of powers. The Centre had precipitat­ed the problem by dismissing the state government a day before it was to prove it had the support of the assembly. In the Centre’s view the constituti­onal machinery had broken down after nine Congress MLAs had withdrawn support to the government. And it had also cited the governor’s report, which had talked of horse-trading being caught on a spy camera. None of these is very convincing and it was the governor himself who had ordered the floor test.

When broken into some of its constituen­t elements, the whole episode throws up contradict­ory pictures. The fact that the Uttarakhan­d high court has not stayed the presidenti­al order of dismissal and yet ordered a floor test in the assembly (now stayed by a division bench) means a dismissed chief minister has been asked to prove his majority. This is no doubt bewilderin­g. If in a subsequent judicial decree the president’s action is called into question, it will be another blow to the constituti­onal arrangemen­t because any action taken by the president in his official capacity should be outside judicial scrutiny (the same applies in the case of the governor). Second, without invalidati­ng the Speaker’s order of disqualify­ing nine rebel MLAs, the court has allowed them to participat­e in the trial of strength. In this situation the anti-defection law very clearly works against the rebel MLAs because together they do not total two-thirds of the Congress legislatur­e party. If they vote against the diktat of the party high command they will be disqualifi­ed. And if because of their vote Mr Rawat loses the floor test, then logically he should be allowed to take a floor test once again in view of the changed compositio­n of the assembly. That would amount to just piling on the agony. As of now, all the three sides — the Centre, Congress and rebel MLAs — have gone to court or are planning to do so.

In 2006, when the Supreme Court issued notice to then Lok Sabha Speaker Somnath Chatterjee after some MPs were expelled on charges of bribery, Mr Chatterjee sent it back to the court without replying to it on the grounds that “no court had jurisdicti­on in the matter”. But 10 years after that both the legislatur­e and the executive are seeking legal relief related to issues that they should have been able to sort out themselves by just following the procedure. This is unfortunat­e.

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