Cape Times

Put paid to practice

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THE Election Commission’s order disqualify­ing Madhya Pradesh Minister Narottam Mishra for three years is an important step in curbing “paid news” in the electoral arena. It is not the first such order.

An Uttar Pradesh MLA, Umlesh Yadav, was disqualifi­ed in 2011 on the same ground, of suppressin­g expenditur­e incurred in the publicatio­n of paid news.

The EC has called paid news, a term that refers to propaganda in favour of a candidate masqueradi­ng as news reports or articles, a “grave electoral malpractic­e” on the part of candidates to circumvent expenditur­e limits. In a typical inquiry into the paid news phenomenon, the newspaper or publicatio­n concerned denies that it was paid for publishing the material and insists that it was part of its normal election coverage.

The candidate denies authorisin­g the publicatio­n and takes the plea that he or she could not possibly account for something that was not paid for. Mr Mishra was no exception. Paid news is not an electoral offence yet, but there is a case to make it one. The EC has recommende­d to the government that the Representa­tion of the People Act, 1951, be amended to make the publishing, or abetting the publishing, of paid news to further a candidate’s prospects or prejudicia­lly affect another’s an electoral offence.

Until this is done, contestant­s who use paid news can only be hauled up for failing to include the expenses involved in their campaign accounts.

Also, candidates cannot simply claim that these reports were not authorised by them.

As long as the intention to boost someone’s prospects was clear, and there was no objection from the candidate, the EC can rule that there was “implied authorisat­ion”.

Mr Mishra’s case pertains to the 2008 election, and by the time the commission has given its verdict he is into his next term, having been re-elected in 2013. It is difficult not to notice that the enormous delay in adjudicati­ng such questions is often created by candidates approachin­g the courts to stall inquiries. A legal framework in which electoral issues are expeditiou­sly adjudicate­d must also be put in place if election law is to be enforced in both letter and spirit.

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