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Disqualification of MLAs

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September 19, 2017

Why in news?

18 MLAs in Tamil Nadu were disqualified by the Tamil Nadu Assembly Speaker.

What was the reason?

  • The disqualified legislators belong to a faction of the AIADMK that opposes to the ruling dispensation.
  • They gave a memorandum to the Governor expressing lack of confidence in the present Chief Minister.
  • The Speaker interpreted it as amounting to “voluntarily giving up” their party membership.

What was the hidden agenda?

  • It is seen as a partisan decision aimed at securing a majority, after a rebellion within its party reduced it to a minority.
  • It reduced the total membership of the House from 233 to 215 and, thereby, the majority threshold from 117 to 108.
  • The Speaker’s ruling comes at a time when there is an increasingly indefensible reluctance on the part of the Governor to order a floor test.

Can there be a judicial review?

  • Tenth Schedule of the Constitution prescribes two conditions under which a member of a political party may be disqualified –
    1. voluntarily giving up their membership
    2. when a whip is disobeyed
  • The Speaker’s decision under the Tenth Schedule of the Constitution is subject to judicial review.
  • If it is challenged, the courts will have to decide whether legislators withdrawing support to their own party’s government amounts to voluntarily giving up their membership.
  • In Balchandra L. Jarkiholi & Others v. B.S. Yeddyurappa (2011), the Supreme Court, in similar circumstances, quashed the disqualification of 11 MLAs in Karnataka.
  • While such legal and constitutional questions may be decided judicially, political morality has suffered a blow in the State.

 

Source: The Hindu

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