Supreme Court Dismisses Plea To Stay Appointment Of Election Commissioners

06:42 PM Mar 21, 2024 | G Plus News

 

The top court will examine validity of the 2023 Act, posts matter for hearing on August 5

GUWAHATI: The Supreme Court on March 21 dismissed the applications seeking a stay on two Election Commissioners saying that with elections around the corner a stay on their appointment would lead to “chaos and uncertainty.”

However, a bench comprising Justices Sanjiv Khanna and Dipankar Datta did question the Centre’s hasty appointment of the two officials.

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Justice Sanjiv Khanna was quoted as saying, “At this stage we cannot stay the legislation and it will lead to only chaos and uncertainty."

The apex court while questioning the Centre for the speed with which the Search Committee shortlisted candidates and the speed with which two Election Commissioners were selected by the Selection Committee said, “It is not questioning the credentials of the Election Commissioners selected, but on the procedure in which the selection was made."

The apex court also refused to grant any interim stay on the operation of the Chief Election Commissioner and other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Terms of Office) Act, 2023. 

It said it will examine the main petitions challenging the validity of the 2023 Act and asked the Centre to file its response within six weeks and posted the matter for hearing on August 5.

"At the stage, we cannot stay the legislation or suspend it operation. It would lead to chaos and uncertainty and we cannot do it (stay) by way of an interim order. There are no allegations against the new election commissioners," the bench told the petitioners who have challenged the new law.

The petitioners were also seeking a stay on the appointment of new election commissioners.

"We are dismissing the applications for stay on the appointment," the bench said.

Observing that it cannot be denied that election commissioners should be independent and fair, the bench said polls have been held since Independence and the country has had very good election commissioners in the past.

It noted that earlier election commissioners were appointed by the executive and now, they are being appointed under a law.

The top court said the 2023 verdict of its constitution bench nowhere said there has to be a member from the judiciary in the selection panel for appointment of election commissioners in the new law.

It said the intent of the 2023 verdict, which proposed a selection panel comprising the prime minister, the Leader of Opposition and the Chief Justice of India, was for a period till Parliament enacts a law.
The verdict was intended to nudge Parliament to enact law as there was a "vacuum" and it didn't say what kind of law should be made, the bench said.

During the hearing, the bench questioned the Centre over the procedure adopted for appointment of two new election commissioners.

It said the selection committee should have been given more time to apply its mind on the appointment of election commissioners.

"The search committee for appointment of election commissioners should have been given a fair share of time to understand the background of candidates," the bench observed.

Appearing on behalf of the Centre, Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, told the bench that the process had started in February, immediately after the Act came into force. The selection procedure took place under the Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners Act, 2023.

Retired IAS officers Gyanesh Kumar and Sukhbir Singh Sandhu were recently appointed as election commissioners.

The appointments came ahead of the Lok Sabha polls starting on April 19.

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Under the new law, the selection panel has the prime minister as the chairperson, and the leader of opposition and a Union minister nominated by the prime minister are the two other members.

A five-judge constitution bench had in March 2023 ruled that the Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) and Election Commissioners (ECs) shall be appointed on the advice of a committee comprising the Prime Minister, the Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha and the Chief Justice of India.