Why in the News?
The Supreme Court’s judgment in the 16th Presidential Reference (Article 143) has stirred major debate. The core issue: Can the Court prescribe timelines for constitutional authorities such as Governors, Speakers, and the President?
The Court refused to set any timelines — which many view as judicial restraint, while others see it as judicial abdication, especially because governance paralysis around anti-defection cases and withheld Bills is worsening.
Constitutional Silence on Timelines
Constitutional gap
The Constitution assigns crucial decision-making functions to:
- President
- Governors
- Speakers (under Tenth Schedule)
…but specifies no timelines for:
- Deciding defection cases
- Acting on Bills
- Returning Bills for reconsideration
- Assenting to legislative decisions
Problem
This “silence” leads to:
- Abuse of discretion
- Constitutional deadlock
- Deliberate delays for political benefit
Key Constitutional Anomalies Identified
a) Delay in Anti-Defection Proceedings
- Speakers act as quasi-judicial authorities under the Tenth Schedule.
- No deadline → cases remain pending for months or even entire tenures.
- Result: MLAs who defect continue in office with no consequences.
→ Undermines anti-defection law & legislative integrity.
b) Governors Withholding Bills
Governors in several States have:
- Sat on Bills indefinitely
- Returned Bills without reasons
- Blocked duly passed laws → effectively nullifying the legislature
This creates governance paralysis and raises questions:
- Can Governors withhold Bills indefinitely?
- Is inaction a form of veto?
- Should timelines be constitutionally mandated?
The Supreme Court’s Verdict: What It Said
The Court held that:
- Article 200 (Governor’s assent) does NOT prescribe timelines
- Therefore, Courts should not create timelines
- Doing so would amount to “judicial legislation”
But the consequence is serious:
The verdict extends unrestrained discretion to Governors and Speakers, enabling:
- Legislative paralysis
- Executive obstruction
- Violation of democratic mandate
The Irony in the Verdict
The article points out a deep contradiction:
| What the judgment intended | What it actually enables |
| Judicial restraint | Constitutional authorities blocking legislatures |
| Respect for constitutional text | Administrative subversion |
| Avoiding overreach | Weakening founding ideals |
The Court focused on literal interpretation, while ignoring:
- Purpose of provisions
- Constitutional morality
- Impact on democratic functioning
Constitutional Morality & Ambedkar’s View
Dr. B.R. Ambedkar emphasised that:
- Form of administration is inseparable from the Constitution’s spirit
- Legislatures + constitutional authorities must uphold public conscience
- Courts must ensure the founding values are preserved
Thus, failure to interpret constitutional silence in line with constitutional morality is dangerous.
The Verdict as an Abdication
The article argues that the Court should have:
a) Interpreted constitutional silence purposively, not textually
b) Prevented abuse of power by constitutional authorities
c) Laid down guiding principles or reasonable timeframes
Instead, the judgment:
- “Ceded” judicial power to Governors
- Encouraged constitutional paralysis
- Strengthened avenues for political manipulation
- Weakened anti-defection enforcement
Implications for Centre–State Relations
The verdict may lead to:
- Continued friction between elected State governments & centrally appointed Governors
- Erosion of cooperative federalism
- Increased litigation on assent/referral processes
- Potential collapse of legislative autonomy in States
Conclusion
The Court’s hesitation to prescribe timelines has far-reaching consequences:
- It enables delays that undermine democratic processes
- Weakens the anti-defection framework
- Encourages constitutional functionaries to act arbitrarily
- May distort the balance of power envisioned by the Constitution
Ultimately, safeguarding constitutional morality requires judicial intervention, not judicial withdrawal. The verdict is thus seen as a missed opportunity to protect democratic values and prevent institutional abuse.
Source: A verdict that is an abdication of judicial function – The Hindu
UPSC CSE PYQ
| Year | PYQ |
| 2013 | The role of individual MPs (Members of Parliament) has diminished over the years and as a result healthy constructive debates on policy issues are not usually witnessed. How far can this be attributed to the anti-defection law, which was legislated but with a different intention? |