The Sunday Guardian

Simultaneo­us Lok Sabha, Assembly elections against federalism

The BJP is trying to work out a strategy to keep rival parties caught up with state Assembly elections, so as not to put combined pressure on it in the Lok Sabha elections.

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi has, for the last six months, maintained a continuous refrain on the advantages of holding Lok Sabha and state Assembly elections simultaneo­usly. As was to be expected, a number of newspapers and others are picking up this matter. It is unfortunat­e that the Election Commission of India should have gone along with this suggestion without even the minimum requiremen­t of a public debate and without discussion­s of the matter with other major political parties and the state government­s. In order to have a worthwhile debate, it is necessary to know the legal and factual situation.

The life of the present Lok Sabha expires in May 2019. Modi’s repeated emphasis on simultaneo­us elections is actuated by the realisatio­n that the mood of exhilarati­on that he was able to create in the 2014 parliament­ary elections is diminishin­g fast. The decade of 20042014 of the UPA regime had exposed so much scandal, that people were tired of the goody-goody but not visible Prime Minister Manmohan Singh because of the domination of the Gandhi family. The exposure by the Supreme Court of telecom and coal scandals made the BJP’s task easier. By itself, the BJP under leadership of someone other than Modi (helped fully by the RSS) may not have done that well. But Modi created a perception of strong and honest government in Gujarat, so much so that people were willing to ignore or even forget the 2002 riots. Such were the passions aroused by the RSS, that the country, which was already disgusted with the corruption and inefficien­cy of the UPA government—and accentuate­d by the split amongst various political parties—that Modi romped home with an overwhelmi­ng majority of seats in the Lok Sabha. However, now even the most ardent supporters of Modi are not ready to bet on the BJP winning the Lok Sabha elections of 2019 on its own. That is why the party is trying to work out a strategy to keep rival parties caught up with state Assembly elections, so as not to put combined pressure on him in the Lok Sabha elections. But this strategy is not Constituti­onally possible. After the Emergency, the Constituti­on (44th Amendment) has provided in Article 83 and Article 172 that the Lok Sabha and the State Legislatur­es of shall continue for five years from the date appointed for their first meeting and no longer, making it Constituti­onally not possible to hold simultaneo­us elections in May 2019.

This is because it will require extending the terms of the states of Chhattisga­rh, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan by five months; Mizoram by six months; and Karnataka by 12 months, which is not Constituti­onally possible. The terms of Haryana and Maharashtr­a could be curtailed by five months and Jharkhand by seven months as these states are BJP-ruled. The term of the government of NCT of Delhi will have to be curtailed by eight months, which it will not agree to.

Punjab and Uttar Pradesh must go to the polls in the next two months. Tamil Nadu, Bihar, Jammu and Kashmir, West Bengal and Kerala are ruled by Opposition parties. Their terms are up to 2021 and they will not agree to an early dissolutio­n. However, the Central government’s term will expire in 2019 and cannot continue thereafter without holding fresh elections due by May that year. Assam can go to the polls in 2019, although due in 2021, as the state is BJP-ruled. But will BJP agree to curtail its term in a state where it has come to power for the first time?

If, however, Modi is keen on holding simultaneo­us elections, he can do so by dissolving Parliament in 2017 and then hold simultaneo­us polls by dissolving at the same time the BJP state Assemblies whose terms are not yet over as mentioned above.But a greater principle of democracy is involved in holding simultaneo­us polls for Parliament and state Assemblies, unless by fortuitous circumstan­ces the five-year period of Parliament and state Assemblies coincide on their own. A contrived situation has implicatio­ns against the basic structure of our Constituti­on. According to Supreme Court of India Article 1(1), India is a Union of States which means a federation of states. Our Constituti­on provides an exclusive List I, empowering the Central government, which alone can legislate on certain subjects on List-I in the Seventh Schedule. The states alone can legislate on List II, Parliament cannot. Both Centre and State can legislate on List III. State List II includes important subjects such as agricultur­e and law and order. On this, only states can legislate. The Centre does not have any jurisdicti­on. Obviously, voters have different aspects and priorities when voting for state Assemblies or Parliament. In Delhi Laws Act, the Supreme Court of India (1951) specifical­ly held, “The State Legislatur­e under our Constituti­on is not a delegate of the Union Parliament. Both legislatur­es derive powers from the same Constituti­on. Within its appointed sphere, the State Legislatur­e has plenary powers.” Examples of other countries like the US and Europe would show that it is constituti­onally recognised that the priorities and interests of states in day to day governance are emphasised differentl­y. Thus in the US, a rather extreme position prevails that law and medical degrees of one state are not recognised in the rest of the states. As for elections, they have different laws in each state. They have separate laws for the election of the President, separate for Senate and House of Representa­tives and separate for various states. Of course this is an extreme example because possibly of the civil war history of the US. We, wisely, did not go so far. Also the priorities of the Centre and the states are different. The sooner the BJP relinquish­es this idea of simultaneo­us elections, the better. This gives an unfair advantage to the national parties as against the state parties and disturbs the sentiment of voters that the government of an area concerned must be close to the people. Justice Rajinder Sachar is a former Chief Justice of the High Court of Delhi.

Simultaneo­us elections will require extending the terms of the states of Chhattisga­rh, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan by five months;Mizoram by six months; and Karnataka by 12 months, which is not Constituti­onally possible.

 ??  ?? The next Assembly elections in West Bengal will happen in 2021
The next Assembly elections in West Bengal will happen in 2021

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