Bedlam in Karnataka Assemby as Minister, Congress Chief Get Into Heated Exchanges

The tense situation occurred when the Congress made a preliminary submission seeking to move an adjournment motion demanding a dismissal and sedition case against minister E.M. Eshwarappa.

Bengaluru: Pandemonium prevailed in the Karnataka assembly on Wednesday with the minister for rural development and panchayat raj K.S. Eshwarappa and state Congress president D.K. Shivakumar charging towards each other, stopping short of coming to blows.

The tense situation came up when the leader of the opposition Siddaramaiah was making a preliminary submission seeking to move an adjournment motion demanding a dismissal and sedition case against Eshwarappa for his recent statement claiming that bhagwa dhwaj (saffron flag) may become the national flag in the future.

The heated exchanges between the two began when speaker Vishweshwar Hegde Kageri wanted to hear Eshwarappa’s side as charges were made against him in the adjournment motion.

Shivakumar, opposing it, said, “We cannot allow him (Eshwarappa to speak).”

To this, Eshwarappa is said to have made some comments from the place where he was seated, but it was not clearly heard amid the chaos.

Shivakumar, claiming that Eshwarappa said, “This (House) is not your (Shivakumar) father’s property,” tried to charge towards him in a fit of anger.

The state Congress chief, along with some of his party MLAs, then walked towards Eshwarappa who, too, walked from his seat towards them and came close to each other.

Realising that the situation may go out of control, the speaker adjourned the House for lunch while marshals, along with some MLAs from both sides, tried to pacify people indulging in heated exchanges and nearly coming to blows.

Earlier, both leaders were seen indulging in heated personal exchanges in the assembly by calling each other desha drohi and rashtra drohi.

Shivakumar said, “Why do you want to hear about a person who has been involved in ‘desha droha'” when the speaker tried to give Eshwarappa an opportunity to speak.

This elicited a sharp reaction from Eshwarappa, who in turn called the KPCC chief of “looting the resources of the State and hence was put behind bars”.

With legislators from both sides standing up in support of their leaders and involved in heated exchanges, chaotic scenes prevailed.

The speaker even asked the assembly staff to switch off the mikes.

Eshwarappa had recently claimed the saffron flag may become the national flag sometime in the future and the same may be hoisted on the Red Fort then.

He, however, had said the tricolour is the national flag now, and it should be respected by everyone.

Siddaramaiah, during his preliminary submission on an adjournment motion, said Eshwarappa being a senior minister has disrespected the national flag, and cannot continue as a minister in the government, and hence should be dismissed immediately.

“Eshwarappa has made a statement that a saffron flag will be hoisted on the Red Fort in the place of the national flag, which is the symbol of our dignity… He made this statement on February 9, it was reported on February 10, today is February 16, till now the government has not taken any action against him,” Siddaramaiah said.

“According to me, the chief minister has to dismiss Eshwarappa from the ministry. By making such a statement he has lost the competence to continue as a minister. The chief minister should have on his own dismissed Eshwarappa and cases should have been booked against him under section 2 of Prevention of Insults to National Honour Act and for sedition,” he said while pointing out that a sedition case was booked against protesting farmers for hoisting their flag at Red Fort.

Noting that Article 51(1) of the constitution – relating to fundamental duties – states that it shall be the duty of every citizen to abide by the constitution and respect its ideals and institutions, the national flag and the national anthem, Siddaramaiah said they symbolise this country, its freedom and its people.

He further said, “There is a flag code of India, also there is also Prevention of Insults to National Honour Act, 1971, the section 2 of this- states that whoever in any public place or any other place within public view burns, mutilates, defaces, disfigures, destroys or brings into contempt, whether by words or acts-to the Indian National flag…shall be imprisonment for the term extending up to three years, or fine or both.”

Even according to the Indian Penal Code, disrespecting the national flag or the constitution or the national anthem comes under sedition, he added.

As Siddaramaiah demanded  Eshwarappa’s dismissal and filing of a sedition case against him, BJP MLA C.T. Ravi accused the Congress governments in the past of “firing bullets at those who held the national flag in their hands”. The former chief minister hit back stating that the RSS never hoisted the national flag for long after independence.

This resulted in heated exchanges between the opposition and treasury benches as both sides accused each other of not being respectful to the national flag.

Law and parliamentary affairs minister J.C. Madhuswamy, jumping to Eshwarappa’s defence, said as there is no material, what Siddaramaiah has raised does not come under the purview of adjournment motion which should be rejected.

Speaking to reporters later, Siddaramaiah said if Eshwarappa was not suspended and a sedition case was not booked against him, the Congress would stage a protest inside and outside the House.

“Tomorrow (Thursday) by 11 am, we will decide and inform what we will do next, most probably stage round-the-clock protests in the assembly. We will discuss and let you know,” he said in response to a question.

BJP Gives Tickets to 13 Disqualified MLAs for Upcoming Bypolls

Karnataka is scheduled to hold by-elections on December 5.

New Delhi: A day after the Supreme Court upheld the disqualification of 17 MLAs from Karnataka but allowed them to contest bypolls, the BJP gave tickets to 13 out of the 17. Sixteen of them have joined the BJP.

These 17 MLAs were previously with the Congress and Janata Dal (Secular) and their rebellion led to the fall of the previous Kumaraswamy government in Karnataka, paving the way for the BJP to once again take the state.

Karnataka is scheduled to hold by-elections on December 5. Of the 15 seats that will be up for by-elections, the BJP has announced candidates for 14, out of which 13 are former Congress or former JD(S) legislators who were disqualified by the Supreme Court. The BJP will need to win at least six out of these 15 seats to remain in power. Two more seats in the legislature are vacant but elections for these will be held later.

The fall of the Kumaraswamy government led the BJP’s Yediyurappa and former chief minister of the state, to power in Karnataka once again.

Also read: SC Judgment on Disqualified Karnataka MLAs Could Further Weaken Anti-Defection Act

The rebellion from these 17 legislators had led to their disqualification by the speaker of the Karnataka assembly. This disqualification was upheld by the Supreme Court on Wednesday. However, the difference is that the speaker had disqualified the MLAs from contesting elections until the end of the current assembly’s term in 2023.

The Supreme Court set this aside and has allowed them to the contest by-polls this year. The very next day, the disqualified MLAs all joined the BJP and nearly all of them were given tickets.

Some of the disqualified legislators who have been rewarded by the BJP are from the constituencies of Kagwad, Gokak, Yellapur, Hirekerur, Vijayanagara, Chikkaballapura, KR Puram, Yeshwanthpur, Hoskote, Mahalakshmi Layout, Hunsur, Krishnarajpet.

B.S. Yediyurappa, the current chief minister, spoke on Thursday expressing confidence in these “new” candidates and said they would be future legislators and ministers. This indicates that several of the rebels MLAs could also be rewarded with ministerial positions if they win their bypoll seats. He also said that his party was confident that it would win all 15 of the seats that are up for the bypolls.

Disqualified MLAs Will Join BJP on Thursday: Karnataka CM, Deputy

Deputy CM Ashwathnarayan said the disqualified MLAs will join the BJP on Thursday morning.

Bangalore: Hours after the Supreme Court on Wednesday paved the way for the disqualified Congress-JD(S) legislators in Karnataka to contest the December 5 assembly bypolls, chief minister B.S. Yediyurappa and deputy chief minister Ashwathnarayan C.N. said they will be joining the BJP on November 14.

In a related development, the state BJP’s core committee met and discussed the candidates for the bypolls to 15 of the 17 vacant seats, but did not take any final decision.

Speaking after the core committee meeting, Yediyurappa said the disqualified MLAs have expressed intention to join the party on Thursday and they would be given the membership.

Earlier, Ashwathnarayan said the disqualified MLAs will join the party on Thursday at 10.30 am here in the presence of Yediyurappa and BJP state President Nalin Kumar Kateel.

Also read: SC Judgment on Disqualified Karnataka MLAs Could Further Weaken Anti-Defection Act

“They (disqualified legislators) have expressed interest to join BJP and have met our senior leaders. They have been welcomed to join the party,” he told reporters in Delhi.

Some disqualified MLAs along with Ashwathnarayan met B.L. Santosh, BJP national general secretary (organisation), in New Delhi hours after the verdict.

Ashwathnarayan said party leaders and the disqualified legislators will meet the chief minister and the state president on Thursday and decide on the future course of action.

“There is no trouble or anything, they want to join the party and will be joining… bypolls and other things will come later,” he said.

The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld the disqualification of 17 Congress-JD(S) MLAs by the then Speaker K.R. Ramesh Kumar but allowed them to contest the December 5 bypolls in the state.

The court struck down the portion of the order of then Speaker by which the legislators were disqualified till the end of the 15th Karnataka assembly in 2023.

Asked if they have been promised ticket for bypolls, Ashwathnarayan said they are joining with joy and full faith.

“They, our friends have no doubt. They are joining the party keeping good faith, when they don’t have doubts, why you (media) have,” he added.

Also read: Explainer: Do Karnataka Rebel MLAs Have a Case to Press Their Resignation?

Karnataka BJP general secretary Arvind Limbavali said the core committee discussed about the candidates for the bypolls but no decision has been taken. A final call on it is likely by Thursday evening.

BJP sources said it is no secret that the disqualified MLAs – most of them at least – would be given the tickets to contest the polls.

Yediyurappa too had recently spoken about the plans to give tickets to them, if they intend to contest as BJP candidates.

SC Judgment on Disqualified Karnataka MLAs Could Further Weaken Anti-Defection Act

The bench missed an opportunity to lift the veil behind the resignations from the assembly, and instead considered it as an act with no bearing on defection.

Henceforth, legislators who wish to defect need not dread the Tenth Schedule to the Constitution, dealing with the disqualification of elected representatives on the grounds of defection. Before indulging in any anti-party activity which could invite disqualification under the schedule, they need to simply send in their resignation letters to the presiding officers of the house to which they have been elected as members.

If their resignation letters precede the cause of action of their disqualification proceedings, the speakers ought not to inquire into their motivation for resigning their seats. The speakers ought to satisfy themselves by ensuring that the resignation letters were not forged by others, and that the members who resigned did not do so out of coercion.

If the members who resign do so because of some allurement from other parties, the speaker ought not to cite that as a ground for rejecting their resignations.

The Supreme Court bench comprising Justices N.V. Ramana, Sanjiv Khanna and Krishna Murari on Wednesday, in its judgment in Shrimanth Balasaheb Patil v Hon’ble Speaker, Karnataka Legislative Assembly and others, (authored by Justice Ramana) did not have to pronounce on the validity of the rejection of resignations of 17 MLAs by the former speaker of the Karnataka assembly, because it found that their acts of disqualification arose prior to their submission of resignation letters.

Since the bench found their disqualification by the speaker constitutional, it did not have to adjudicate the question of whether the speaker’s rejection of their resignation letters was valid. But that did not prevent the bench from laying down the principles to guide the speaker’s decision in future.

The Karnataka MLAs disqualification case posed an unprecedented dilemma before the Supreme Court in that whether the MLAs who defect could evade the rigours of the Tenth Schedule, by submitting their resignations. The court knew that the MLAs wanted to resign, in order to avoid disqualification by the speaker, and thereby avail the perks of office offered by the then opposition, the BJP, in the event of the latter forming the government, after the fall of the JD(s)-Congress alliance led by the former chief minister, H.D.Kumaraswamy.

As the constitution permits non-members, if not otherwise disqualified as members, to continue as ministers for six months, the period within which they should get reelected, they chose to resign from the assembly, rather than from their parties, which could have resulted in their disqualification under the Act. But the bench missed an opportunity to lift the veil behind their resignation from the assembly, and instead considered it as an act with no bearing on defection.

Also read: Explainer: Do Karnataka Rebel MLAs Have a Case to Press Their Resignation?

The former Karnataka speaker took a controversial decision in disqualifying the 17 MLAs for the rest of the current assembly’s term, so that they do not contest by-elections to seek reelection and resume their membership of the house, and enjoy the rewards offered by the opposition to lure them away from the coalition which ruled the state earlier. The bench, however, struck down this action of the speaker as unconstitutional, and declared them eligible for contesting the by-elections to the assembly.

The bench, while doing so, dwelt upon the importance of party politics in a democracy, and arguably justified the requirement of stability within the government to facilitate good governance, which it claimed is mandated under our constitution. The bench erroneously assumed that good governance is not possible if the government is not stable and therefore,  if a few MLAs resign from their seats in order to provide “stability” to the government of the opposition, so be it.

By approving the disqualification of these MLAs (while declaring their disqualification for the rest of the assembly’s term as unconstitutional), the bench has made the end-result of resignations and disqualifications similar. Under both situations, the MLAs have to recontest to secure their reelection to the assembly. Therefore, it does not really matter whether the Speaker accepts their resignations or disqualify them, except of course, for the fact that a member whose resignation is accepted, but not disqualified, may be in a position to become a minister for six months, without getting reelected to the assembly.

“The separation between dissent (as represented by resignation) and defection requires to be made apparent, so that democratic values are upheld in balance with other constitutional considerations”, the bench observed, clearly refusing to acknowledge that the line of demarcation between the two is often blurred.

MLAs who resigned from the Congress-JD(S) alliance. Photo: PTI/Files

The bench would have clearly wanted the petitioners in the case to have first exhausted the remedy of approaching the high court first, before seeking the Supreme Court’s intervention. But the peculiar facts of this case, wherein another bench of the Supreme Court had already passed certain orders, prevented this bench from closing the doors on the petitioners on this ground.

Determination of whether the resignations were “voluntary” or “genuine” cannot be based on the ipse dixit of the speaker, instead, it has to be based on his “satisfaction”. Even though the satisfaction is subjective, it has to be based on objective material showing that resignation is not voluntary or genuine, the bench held. The satisfaction of the speaker is subject to judicial review, it added.

“On a consideration of the totality of the facts brought on record before us, it cannot be held that the findings of the Speaker are so unreasonable or unconscionable that no tribunal could have arrive at the same findings”, the bench concluded.

Also read: Why Is the MLA a Commercial Commodity in Karnataka?

“The Speaker decided that the members voluntarily gave up their membership of the party. We cannot review the facts and evaluate them in these petitions”, the bench observed refusing to go into the merits of speaker’s decision to disqualify the MLAs under the Tenth Schedule.

“Principle of natural justice is not a straitjacket formula”, the bench said while dismissing concerns that the Speaker’s decision to grant just three days to these MLAs to respond to the notices of disqualification was against natural justice.

Disqualification for the end of the assembly’s term?

The absence of the words “being chosen as” in Article 191(2) – in contrast to Article 191(1) – suggests that a person who is no longer a member due to disqualification under Tenth Schedule does not suffer from the additional infirmity of not being allowed to become a member subsequently. Therefore, such a person is not barred from contesting elections. The Returning officer, at an election, under Section 36(2)(a) of the RPA, can only reject a nomination if a candidate is disqualified “for being chosen” to fill the seat under Article 191 of the constitution, the bench reasoned.

Both Articles 164(1B) and 361B show that disqualification does not bar a person from contesting elections. The outer period of disqualification is either till the end of the term or till the disqualified member is re-elected, whichever is earlier. Therefore, the constitution contemplates a situation where an election takes place prior to the end of the term of the house, the bench further added.

A view of Supreme Court of India in New Delhi. Credit: PTI

Supreme Court of India in New Delhi. Photo: PTI

The speaker does not have any explicit power to specify the period of disqualification or bar a member from contesting elections after disqualification until the end of the term of the legislative assembly, the bench clearly held.

Such an extreme stand could have a chilling effect on legitimate dissent; such a change in the policy cannot be looked into by this court, as the same squarely falls within the legislative forte, the bench further explained.

The desirability of a particular rule or law should not in any event be confused with the question of the existence of the same, and constitutional morality should never be replaced by political morality, in deciding what the constitution mandates, the bench reasoned. The bench thus struck down the part of the impugned orders passed by the speaker which specifies that the disqualification would last from the date of the order to the expiry of the term of 15th legislative assembly of Karnataka as ultra vires the constitutional mandate. As this does not go to the root of the order, it does not affect the aspect of legality of the disqualification orders, the bench said while justifying its decision to sever the two aspects of the Speaker’s order.

Also read: Karnataka Offers Lesson in Subversion of Democracy

“Parliament should reconsider strengthening of certain aspects of the Tenth Schedule, so that such undemocratic practices are discouraged.  There is a growing trend of Speakers acting against the constitutional duty of being neutral. Additionally, political parties are indulging in horse trading and corrupt practices, due to which the citizens are denied the stable governments”, the bench observed without going into the specifics.

No substantial questions of law exist in the present matter which needs reference to a larger bench, the bench held while dismissing pleas of the respondents. But a relook by a larger bench may become inevitable in future, as this decision opens the door for defections through re-election or resignation to circumvent the rigours of the Tenth Schedule.

SC Upholds Disqualification of Karnataka MLAs, but Allows Them to Contest Bypolls

The BJP said it will take a call soon on whether the rebels should be given the party’s ticket.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld the disqualification of 17 Congress-JD (S) MLAs of Karnataka, but allowed them to contest the upcoming bypolls on December 5.

A petition was filed by the MLAs, who had resigned and paved the way for the JD(S)-Congress coalition to collapse. They challenged the orders of the then-assembly speaker K.R. Ramesh Kumar to disqualify them.

The three-judge bench of Justices N.V. Ramana, Sanjiv Khanna and Krishna Murari, delivering the verdict, said they did not appreciate the manner in which the petitioner approached the court. “A party challenging disqualification is required to first approach the [high court]. This court will have the benefit of HC judgement if dispute comes here. Even though this court has jurisdiction,” Justice Ramana said, according to LiveLaw.

According to reports, the apex court upheld the speaker’s order disqualifying the MLAs, but struck down the portion which said “until the end of the term”. The speaker is a quasi-judicial authority, the court observed, asking the petitioners to go to high court first instead of utilising Article 32, which allows individuals to move to the Supreme Court to seek justice.

The bench said that the speaker should give “reasonable time” for considering the resignations because their validity depends on the facts and circumstances of each case. The bench also observed the “growing trend” of speakers acting against the constitutional mandate to remain neutral, saying this is denying citizens stable governments.

“Further horse trading and corrupt practices associated with defection and change of loyalty for lure of office or wrong reasons have not abated…. In these circumstances, there is need to consider strengthening certain aspects, so that such undemocratic practices are discouraged and checked,” the bench observed, according to LiveLaw.

The bench had reserved its verdict on October 25.

Kumar had disqualified these 17 MLAs of ruling the Congress-JD(S) coalition ahead of a trust vote in July after they submitted their resignations and flew to Mumbai. The then chief minister H.D. Kumaraswamy had resigned after losing the trust vote, which paved the way for the BJP-led government in the state under B.S. Yediyurappa.

Bypolls to 15 of the 17 assembly seats which fell vacant following the disqualification of the MLAs are scheduled for December 5 and candidates are required to file their nomination papers between November 11 and November 18.

The disqualified MLAs have recently approached the apex court seeking a direction to the Election Commission to postpone the assembly by-polls till the pronouncement of the verdict in the matter.

Some of the disqualified MLAs had argued in the apex court that they have an “indefeasible right” to resign as members of the assembly and the decision by the then-speaker to disqualify them smacks of “vengeance” and “mala fide” intention.

During arguments in the matter, senior advocate Kapil Sibal, appearing for the Karnataka Congress, had contended that the then-speaker, who was the master of the assembly, had exercised his jurisdiction to disqualify the MLAs and his decision cannot be questioned.

Supreme Court. Photo: PTI

Sibal had also submitted that “the matter needs to be referred to a Constitution bench as it raises matters of grave constitutional importance”.

The incumbent Karnataka assembly speaker had earlier told the top court that he has no difficulty in hearing these 17 MLAs and take a “fresh call” on the issue.

Solicitor general Tushar Mehta, appearing for the office of the Karnataka assembly speaker, had submitted that under the scheme of the Constitution, a lawmaker has the right to resign and the speaker should accept it. The current assembly speaker is V. Hegde Kageri.

Legislators, BJP and Congress welcome verdict

Speaking after the judgment, BJP’s Karnataka president Nalin Kumar Kateel said the party respects the court’s verdict and will take a call on giving the disqualified MLAs tickets to contest the bypolls.

“I will speak with CM Yediyurappa and also discuss it with the BJP core committee, after which we will take a call on the issue,” he said, according to The News Minute.

Yediyurappa also welcomed the verdict, saying he will meet the disqualified MLAs in the evening. “We will announce the decision regarding inducting the rebels into the party this evening. I will consult with state and national leaders too,” he said, according to reports.

Disqualified Hunsur MLA and former JD(S) state president Adagooru H. Vishwanath said the verdict was a big relief. “We did not break any laws. The speaker, Congress and JD(S) had colluded to ensure that we (referring to the 17 rebel MLAs) cannot contest elections,” he said.

Meanwhile, Congress’s state president Dinesh Gundu Rao claimed that the verdict “proved” that the BJP government in Karnataka is illegal. On Twitter, he welcomed the verdict and said “BJP used unconstitutional means to fabricate a majority”.

He also said the BJP’s role in the toppling of the JD(S)-Congress coalition government is “now clear”.


(With PTI inputs)

Congress Expels 14 Rebel MLAs From Karnataka

All the MLAs, who resigned from the state legislature, had abstained from voting that led to the defeat of the Congress-JD(S) government in the trust vote.

New Delhi: The Congress on Tuesday expelled the 14 rebel MLAs from Karnataka who were responsible for bringing down the party’s coalition government in the state.

All the MLAs, who resigned from the state legislature, had abstained from voting that led to the defeat of the Congress-JD(S) government in the trust vote.

The action by the party comes days after these MLAs were disqualified from the state legislature.

The then Karnataka assembly speaker K.R. Ramesh Kumar disqualified 11 Congress legislators – Pratap Gowda Patil, B.C. Patil, Shivram Hebbar, S.T. Somashekar, Byrati Basavaraj, Anand Singh, Roshan Baig, Munirathna, K. Sudhakar, M.T.B. Nagaraj and Shrimant Patil – on Sunday.

Also read: Karnataka: Speaker Disqualifies 14 More Rebel MLAs Day Before BJP Seeks Trust Vote

Three other rebel MLAs – Ramesh Jarkiholi, Mahesh Kumatalli and Shankar – were disqualified on Thursday.

The Congress-JDS coalition government headed by H.D. Kumaraswamy crumbled under the weight of a rebellion by a big chunk of its lawmakers, 20 of whom were absent for the voting that led to the defeat of its trust vote.

The AICC has approved the proposal received from PCC President, Karnataka regarding the expulsion of the MLAs, a party statement said, giving the names of all the 14 MLAs.

BJP MLA Vishweshwar Kageri to Become Karnataka Assembly Speaker

At the deadline at 12 noon, six-time MLA, Kageri was the only one to have filed the nomination papers for the post, which fell vacant after KR Ramesh Kumar quit on Monday.

Bengaluru: Senior BJP MLA Vishweshwar Hegde Kageri is all set to become the next speaker of Karnataka assembly as he was the only candidate to file his nomination papers for the post on Tuesday.

At the deadline at 12 noon, six-time MLA, Kageri was the only one to have filed the nomination papers for the post, which fell vacant after KR Ramesh Kumar quit on Monday.

“We received only one nomination that was of Vishweshwar Hegde Kageri,” an official in the Karnataka assembly secretariat told PTI.

Chief minister B.S. Yediyurappa and BJP leaders Govind Karjol, R. Ashok, Jagadish Shettar, K.S. Eshwarappa and S. Suresh Kumar were present when Kageri submitted his nominations to the Karnataka assembly secretary M.K. Vishalakshi.

Ramesh Kumar had resigned after a 14-month long tenure under the Congress-JD(S) coalition government on Monday after the three-day old B.S. Yediyurappa ministry won the vote of confidence in the assembly.

A Congress spokesperson said the party did not field any candidate because the BJP has the majority and it has been the convention of electing the speaker unopposed.

The JD(S) spokesperson too echoed the same views.

Also Read: Karnataka: Yediyurappa Wins Trust Vote, Assembly Speaker Ramesh Kumar Resigns

The election of Kageri would be formally announced when the Assembly meets on Wednesday, BJP sources said.

After being an active member of the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad, student wing of the Sangh Pariwar, Kageri climbed up the political ladder.

Kageri got elected to the Karnataka assembly from Ankola assembly seat in 1994 and since then there has been no looking back.

Kageri had also served as the minister for primary and secondary education.

(PTI)

Karnataka Speaker Disqualifies 2 Congress Rebel MLAs, an Independent

Giving his ruling, the speaker said he would take a decision on the remaining 14 cases in a “couple of days.”

Bengaluru: Karnataka assembly speaker K.R. Ramesh Kumar on Thursday disqualified two Congress rebel MLAs and an independent legislator till the end of the term of the current house in 2023. The disqualified MLAs were R. Shankar (independent) and Ramesh L. Jarkiholi, Mahesh K.

Giving his ruling, the speaker said he would take a decision on the remaining 14 cases in a “couple of days.”

Kumar said members disqualified under the anti-defection law cannot contest or get elected to the assembly till the end of the term of the house.

He said he was convinced that the resignations by the three members were not voluntary and genuine and he had therefore rejected them and proceeded to disqualify them under the anti-defection law.

“They have violated the provisions of the 10th Schedule of the Constitution (anti-defection law) and therefore are disqualified,” he said.

The speaker’s announcement came two days after the Congress-JDS coaltion government headed by H.D. Kumaraswamy collapsed as it lost the trust vote in the assembly in the backdrop of the rebellion by a section of their MLAs.

(With PTI inputs)

SC Order On Karnataka Crisis: What It Says and What It Doesn’t

The court protected the freedom of the rebel MLAs to either take part in the assembly proceedings on Thursday or opt out, but what it actually held is that these MLAs are free to comply with or defy the whip issued by their parties.

The Supreme Court’s order on Wednesday in Pratap Gauda Patil and Others vs State of Karnataka and Others has seemingly satisfied the rebel MLAs who are the petitioners as well as the respondents, the assembly speaker K.R. Ramesh Kumar and the state chief minister, H.D. Kumaraswamy.

This is not surprising as the bench comprising the Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi and Justices Deepak Gupta and Aniruddha Bose steered clear of contentious issues raised by the parties on how the speaker ought to deal with the resignations of the rebel MLAs from the assembly, and whether he could address their resignations and the disqualification petitions pending against them holistically.

Keeping in view the fact that the state assembly is to take up the trust motion moved by the chief minister on Thursday, the bench permitted the speaker to decide on the request for resignation by the 15 members of the House “within such time frame” as he “may consider appropriate”.

The bench also took the view that in the present case, the discretion of the speaker while deciding on the matter of resignations should not be fettered by any direction or observation of this court. The speaker should be left free to decide the issue in accordance with Article 190 read with Rule 202 of the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Karnataka Legislative Assembly framed in exercise of the powers under Article 208 of the constitution.

Also read | SC: Karnataka Rebel MLAs Can Sit Out Trust Vote, Speaker to Decide on Resignations

It is apparent that the bench saw merit in the contentions of the senior counsel representing the chief minister, Rajeev Dhavan, that its order on July 11 directing the speaker to decide on the resignations within a few hours after 6 pm was flawed, as it was issued without hearing the speaker. The speaker’s non-compliance with that order perhaps made the bench realise that it was inconsistent with the doctrine of separation of powers between the legislature and the judiciary.

The bench, in the last paragraph of the order, held:

“We also make it clear that until further orders, the 15 members of the assembly ought not to be compelled to participate in the proceedings of the ongoing session of the House and an option should be given to them that they can take part in the said proceedings or to opt to remain out of the same”.

The bench limited itself to the options before the rebel MLAs, in order to “maintain the constitutional balance and the conflicting and competing rights” canvassed before it. The bench was not keen on “exhaustive enumeration of the Constitutional principles”, because that would have taken more time, whereas the Thursday’s proceedings in the assembly required an immediate answer without compromising the rights of the contending parties before it.

Assembly speaker K.R. Ramesh Kumar. Photo: PTI

Does the above paragraph rule out the issue of the whip by the Janata Dal (Secular) and the Congress against the rebel MLAs to participate in the Thursday’s proceedings of the assembly, and vote in favour of the chief minister’s trust motion?

If one reads the order carefully, it is clear that the bench does not rule out the consequences of the rebel MLAs taking part in the assembly’s proceedings on Thursday or opting to remain out of the same. It does not even protect the rebel MLAs from the probable consequences of their action. It does not restrain the party whips from issuing any directives to the rebel MLAs to attend the proceedings of the assembly on Thursday and vote in favour of the chief minister’s motion.

It is reasonable to ask whether the issue of party whips to the rebel MLAs to take part in the proceedings of the assembly on Thursday would amount to compelling them to do so – which the Supreme Court has expressly ruled against. The answer to this can be found in the case law, as decided by the Gauhati high court in 2008, which holds the field so far.

In Yitachu vs Union of India, decided by the Gauhati high court on March 12, 2008, a bench comprising Justices J. Chelameswar, Ranjan Gogoi – present CJI, who was then a judge of the high court – A. Roy, I. Ansari and B. Katakey, held that the Tenth Schedule itself does not prohibit any member of a legislature from violating the direction/whip issued by a political party to legislators belonging to that political party.

“All that paragraph 2(1)(b) of the Tenth Schedule prescribes is that when such a direction/whip issued by the political party is violated by a legislator without either the prior permission of the political party or such violation is not condoned subsequently by the political party, the legislator incurs disqualification for continuing as a member of the house.”

The object, sought to be achieved by the Tenth Schedule, according to the bench of the Gauhati high court, is to ensure the loyalty of the legislators to a political party, which sponsored the candidature of such a legislator at the election. It was a remedy, which the parliament sitting as a constituent assembly, thought fit to provide in order to curb the evil of widespread practice of unprincipled floor-crossing motivated by the concerns of personal benefit, the Gauhati high court had held:

“Parliament could as well have declared that such an act of voting (which attracts the consequence of the termination of the membership of such a member) should also be ignored for the purpose of deciding the issue on which the voting took place. But it did not. Though it would be difficult to speculate the reasons for such omission, we hazard a guess that it is in recognition of the possibility of honest dissent. It is, thus, a balancing act between the party discipline and the convictions of individual members.”

The Gauhati high court had made it clear in this case that the disqualification imposed by paragraph 2(1)(b) must be so construed as not to unduly impinge on the said freedom of speech of a member. This, it held, would be possible if paragraph 2(1)(b) is confined in its scope by keeping in view the object underlying the Tenth Schedule, namely, to curb the evil of mischief of political defection motivated by the lure of office or other similar considerations. “The said object would be achieved if the disqualification incurred on the ground of voting or abstaining from voting by a member is confined to cases where a change of Government is likely to be brought about or is prevented, as the case may be…”, the high court had held.

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The Gauhati high court, while interpreting the Tenth Schedule, was seeking to answer the question whether the speaker could eliminate a vote given in contravention of a whip. The high court held that such a consequence was not contemplated by the constitution and therefore, the speaker would be wrong, if he does not take into account those votes cast in violation of the whip, or prohibits any MLAs from taking part in the proceedings to decide a confidence motion.

A view of Supreme Court of India in New Delhi. Credit: PTI

A view of the Supreme Court of India in New Delhi. Photo: PTI

On Wednesday, the Supreme Court bench was concerned whether the rebel MLAs, camping in Mumbai, could abstain from Thursday’s proceedings in the Karnataka legislative assembly – keeping in view their resignations from the assembly, which are yet to be decided on by the speaker – and whether they could be subjected to their respective party whips.

Ironically, neither the petitioner nor the respondents before the court raised this issue during the hearing. The petitioners assumed that they had the right to abstain. The respondents did not question their right as they were only concerned about defending the speaker’s power to decide the consequences of their exercise of that right.

Although the Supreme Court protected the freedom of the 15 rebel MLAs to either take part in the assembly proceedings on Thursday or opt to remain out of the same, what it actually held is that these MLAs are free to comply with or defy the whip issued by their parties. The bench did not consider the probable consequences of their decision to abstain, which is equally a violation of the whip issued to them. By directing that the speaker’s decision on their resignations be placed before it, the bench reserved its right to judicially review the speaker’s decision after it is taken.

It is so because the violation of a whip by a member does not result in automatic disqualification of that member. As such conduct by a member could be condoned by the party leadership, or faced with disqualification proceedings, whose outcome is not predictable in advance, it could not be said that issue of the whip itself amounts to compelling a reluctant member to attend the proceedings.

SC: Karnataka Rebel MLAs Can Sit Out Trust Vote, Speaker to Decide on Resignations

The court also said the Karnataka assembly speaker’s decision should be put before it.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Wednesday pronounced verdicts in the Karnataka MLAs’ case that would please both the rebel legislators and the precariously placed Congress-Janata Dal (Secular) government.

A bench of Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi and Justices Deepak Gupta and Aniruddha Bose said that the 15 rebel Congress and JD(S) MLAs “ought not” to be compelled to take part in the proceedings of the Karnataka assembly, which is slated to decide the confidence motion moved by the H.D. Kumaraswamy-led state government on Thursday.

While this essentially means that no party whip is applicable to these MLAs, it remains to be seen in whose favour the numbers  of the 224-seat assembly will tally if a chunk of the coalition’s MLAs keep off the floor test.

The order was welcomed by Karnataka Bharatiya Janata Party chief B.S. Yeddyurappa, whose party has been credited with engineering the whole saga to topple the government. “It’s the victory of the constitution and democracy, and a moral victory for rebel MLAs. It’s only an interim order, the Supreme Court will decide the powers of the speaker in the future,” he said.

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However, the apex court did announce a clear verdict on the powers of the speaker when it said that Karnataka assembly speaker K.R. Ramesh Kumar was free to decide on the resignations of the rebel legislators within such time-frame as was deemed appropriate by him.

Ten of the 15 rebel MLAs had moved the apex court with the plea that the speaker had kept their resignation pending just to disqualify them and alleged that there was nothing wrong in resigning to escape disqualification. Their case was argued by senior advocate Mukul Rohatgi.

The court also said the speaker’s decision be put before it.

The bench said the speaker’s discretion in deciding the resignation issue of the 15 rebel MLAs should not be fettered by the court’s directions or observations. It held that he should be free to decide the issue.

In doing so, the court has largely abdicated its powers and held the speaker’s authority in the case as superior to its own. Ramesh Kumar, in reaction to the verdict, said he would take a decision which was “in no way contrary to the Constitution, the court and the Lokpal.”

On Tuesday, senior advocate Rajeev Dhavan who was appearing on behalf of Kumaraswamy, had notably told the court that it had no jurisdiction to pass the two interim orders asking the assembly speaker to decide and, later, maintain the status quo on the resignations and disqualification of the rebel MLAs.

“When resignation process is not in order, the court cannot direct the speaker to decide by 6 PM,” Dhavan had told the bench.

On Thursday, Kumaraswamy, however, declined to comment on the verdict. He was seen offering prayers at a temple in Shankarapuram.

The bench, while pronouncing the order, said it was necessary to maintain the constitutional balance in the matter.

The court said other issues raised in the matter would be decided at a later stage.