Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Governance the loser?

The pending issue of services will affect how Delhi is run

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Over four acrimoniou­s years, the Delhi government, led by Arvind Kejriwal, and the Narendra Modi government at the Centre, have squared off on several issues, the most crucial among them the power to transfer and post bureaucrat­s in the state secretaria­t (services), and control over the state’s anti-corruption unit. These two were seen by both sides as key to who controls Delhi.

This debate, which was in the Supreme Court, was partly resolved on Thursday, in a verdict that will be a blow to the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government. The apex court ruled that control of the anti-corruption branch and the powers to institute commission­s of enquiry rested with the Centre alone. It also referred the issue of services to a separate three-member bench, essentiall­y leaving the question of who controls Delhi’s bureaucrac­y undecided for now. This issue has been in limbo since 2015, resulting face-offs between the elected government, the Lieutenant-Governor’s office, and the bureaucrac­y, and it has not helped either the administra­tive efficiency of the state or its delivery system. Though this was somewhat eased last year, when the Supreme Court laid down the broad contours of administra­tive jurisdicti­on, sluggishne­ss in the machinery remains.

Removing the administra­tive ambiguity in Delhi is easier said than done. The top bureaucrac­y is drawn from a common cadre for a handful of states and Union Territorie­s controlled by the Union home ministry. The problem in the overlappin­g powershari­ng structure between the elected government and the L-G’s office was skirted until 2015, when the government at the state and the Centre managed to find a working solution to their difference­s. But as the AAP and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) are bitter, unyielding rivals, the convention of keeping each other in the loop changed after a May 2015 notificati­on by the home ministry gave the Centre the last word. Since the SC judgment comes ahead of the 2019 Lok Sabha election, Mr Kejriwal has already pitched it as a poll issue. While Delhi waits for a final verdict, governance will continue to be the biggest loser.

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