The Asian Age

‘Votes in name of religion harms secular concept’

- J. VENKATESAN

The Supreme Court on Thursday reserved its verdict on a batch of petitions on whether religion can be used to garner votes in an election and whether it will amount to a “corrupt practice” warranting disqualifi­cation of the winning candidate.

A seven Judge Bench comprising the Chief Justice T.S. Thakur and Justices M. B. Lokur, S.A. Bobde, A.K. Goel, Uday Lalit, D.Y. Chandrachu­d and L. Nageswar Rao reserved the verdict at the conclusion of arguments spread over two weeks on the question of law relating to the interpreta­tion of “corrupt practice” within the meaning of Section 123 (3) of the Representa­tion of the People Act.

At the outset, the CJI again clarified on Thursday that the seven-judge bench is not going into the larger debate as to what is Hindutva or what is its meaning and it will confine the scope only whether religion can be used to garner votes in an election.

The CJI cautioned the counsel that seeking votes in the name of religion might affect the secular concept of elections in our democracy and such a thing cannot be allowed.

The CJI said that in a secular country, any appeal to

the voters should be in tune with secular philosophy and political agitation advancing the cause of religion with an intent to garner votes is not permissibl­e. It was the submission on behalf of the appellants that an appeal by a candidate to voters other than those who share his religion is not proscribed. It was argued that certain political parties like Akali Dal and Indian Muslim League were registered on the basis of their religious ideologies. It was not possible to completely shut them from making any appeal on the basis of religion.

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