City
Epaper

Election Commission shouldn't be 'yes man' of government: SC

By ANI | Updated: November 24, 2022 06:05 IST

The Supreme Court on Wednesday said that people manning the Election Commission of India should not be "yes man" ...

Open in App

The Supreme Court on Wednesday said that people manning the Election Commission of India should not be "yes man" of the government but "independent who can act independently" even if it comes to taking on the Prime Minister.

A five-judge Constitution bench headed by Justice KM Joseph emphasised that the appointment of the Chief Election Commissioner and the Election Commissioners should be "procedure-based and transparent".

In a hypothetical poser to the government, the bench asked, "Do you think the Election Commissioner... if he is asked to take on none less than the Prime Minister, it's just example, and he doesn't come around to doing it - will it not be a case of complete breakdown of the system?"

The apex court was hearing pleas challenging the constitutionality of the present appointment process of CEC and ECs and contended that appointments were being done as per the whims of the executive.

The daylong hearing on the third day saw Centre reiterating its argument that the practice of the appointment of CEC and the ECs have worked well over seven decades and there was no "trigger" pointing to any acts of the poll panel adversely impacting the conduct of free and fair election s in the country, for the court to intervence.

Attorney General R Ventakaramani, Solicitor General Tushar Mehta and senior advocate Balbir Singh, appearing for the Centre, said that if there is no law prescribing the procedure for the appointment of CEC and the ECs, then the "silence of constitution" on this aspect can be addressed by the parliament alone and not by judicial intervention.

They told the apex court that independence of executive was sacrosanct as independence of judiciary and there cannot be any outside interference in its affairs of the government.

The hearing in the case will continue on Thursday.

The petitions sought creation of an independent collegium or selection committee for future appointments of CEC and two other ECs.

The petitions stated that unlike the appointments of the CBI director or Lokpal, where the leader of the Opposition and judiciary have a say, the Centre unilaterally appoints the members of the Election Commission.

The apex court had referred a PILs to the Constitution bench on October 23, 2018.

( With inputs from ANI )

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

Tags: R ventakaramaniSupreme CourtElection Commission Of IndiaBalbir SinghThe election commission of indiaState elections commissionState law commissionSeveral supreme courtState election commission of indiaSupreme court and high court levelThe state election commission
Open in App

Related Stories

MaharashtraSupreme Court Clears Way for Local Body Elections in Maharashtra, Retains Pre-2022 OBC Quota

Maharashtra"Local Body Elections Long Overdue, We Are Fully Prepared", Sanjay Raut on SC Order

MaharashtraMaharashtra Local Body Polls 2025: Supreme Court Asks State Commission to Conduct Elections Within 4 Months

EntertainmentSamay Raina and Four Others Summoned by Supreme Court Over Mocking Disabled Individuals

NationalSC Rejects Red Fort Claim by Woman Posing as Mughal Heir: ‘Why Not Fatehpur Sikri Too?’

National Realted Stories

NationalAfter fake news scare, Comedian Hareesh Kanaran says he’s ‘hale and hearty’

NationalTN Cyber Crime wing issues alert on rising cyber threats amid India-Pak tensions

NationalPak troops moving into forward areas, Indian forces in high state of operational readiness: Govt

NationalPak fired high-speed missile, tried to hit health facilities, schools but was thwarted: Centre slams escalation bid

NationalThree killed, 18 injured in bus-dumper collision in MP's Shajapur