City
Epaper

Pakistan's Supreme Court overturns 2022 ruling, defecting votes now to be counted

By ANI | Updated: October 3, 2024 19:35 IST

Islamabad [Pakistan], October 3 : The Supreme Court of Pakistan on Thursday, accepted a review petition against its 2022 ...

Open in App

Islamabad [Pakistan], October 3 : The Supreme Court of Pakistan on Thursday, accepted a review petition against its 2022 verdict related to the defection clause under Article 63-A of the Constitution, paving the way for defecting votes against party policy to be counted, Dawn reported.

In 2022, Pakistan's top court ruled in favour of a defection clause under Article 63-A of the constitution, discounting the votes cast contrary to the parliamentary party lines in four instances. Today's ruling means that the votes of the ballots of lawmakers against the party policy will also be counted in any further legislation.

The four instances under which the votes against party policy were disregarded are; the election of the Prime Minister, and chief minister; a vote of confidence or no-confidence; a Constitution amendment bill; and a money bill.

According to Dawn, the verdict, pronounced by Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Qazi Faez Isa, is a significant decision in favour of the Shehbaz Sharif-led government that sought to garner support to make amendments to the Constitution, multiple of which pertain to the judiciary.

A five-judge Supreme Court larger bench comprised of Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Qazi Faez Isa Justices Mandokhail, Miankhel, Naeem Akhtar Afghan, and Aminuddin Khan gave the verdict, after hearing the review petition filed by Supreme Court Bar Association (SCBA), DAWN reported,

The SCBA, in the review petition, filed in June 2022, had contended that the court's opinion on Article 63-A was not in accordance with parliamentary democracy established by the Constitution.

Justice Afghan replaced Justice Akhtar. Justice Akhtar was part of the bench that originally heard the case.

Justice Isa announced that SCBA's appeal was accepted unanimously, He said the detailed verdict would be issued later.

Article 63-A aims to restrict the voting powers of lawmakers by making them bound to the decision of the "Party Head" whoever is formally declared the head of the party. The penalty for violating Article 63-A is disqualification from the National Assembly and the vacation of the defecting lawmaker's seat, the Constitution states, as reported by Dawn.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUkraine-Russia peace deal 'closer than ever', says Trump amid talks in Berlin

InternationalIndia, Jordan sign MoUs on renewable energy, digital solutions; Amman expresses intent to join ISA

InternationalEAM Jaishankar co-chairs India-UAE Joint Commission, Strategic Dialogue; reviews partnership, charts future cooperation

EntertainmentRyan Coogler says he almost lost his mind while filming Michael B. Jordan-starrer ‘Sinners’

InternationalEAM Jaishankar meets UAE VP Sheikh Mansour, CEO of Mubadala; discusses economic, defence cooperation, investment opportunities

International Realted Stories

InternationalPM Modi holds "productive discussions" with Jordan's King; shares "8-point vision" on trade, critical minerals, nuclear cooperation

InternationalBangladesh: Prominent journalist Anis Alamgir arrested in 'anti-terror' case

InternationalPM Modi meets King Abdullah II in Jordan, discusses counter-terrorism, regional peace

InternationalRussia and Ukraine edging toward deal on Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant: US official

InternationalIndia-Jordan should aim to enhance bilateral trade to US $5 billion: PM Modi