×

UPSC Courses

DNA banner

DAILY NEWS ANALYSIS

  • 26 February, 2021

  • 8 Min Read

Anti-defection law- Issues with the 10th Schedule

Anti-defection law- Issues with the 10th Schedule

Introduction

  • It has reduced legislators to being accountable primarily to the party and failed to preserve the stability of governments
  • The events in Puducherry highlight, yet again, the absurdity of the anti-defection law.

Anti-defection law analysis

  • The anti-defection law was included in the Constitution as the Tenth Schedule in 1985 to combat the “evil of political defections”.
  • The main purpose was to preserve the stability of governments and insulate them from defections of legislators from the treasury benches.
  • The law stated that any Member of Parliament (MP) or that of a State legislature (MLA) would be disqualified from their office if they voted on any motion contrary to the directions issued by their party.
  • In what has now become the standard operating procedure, several MLAs from the treasury benches resigned, lowering the numbers required for a no-confidence motion to succeed.
    • This formula has been seen recently in other States such as Madhya Pradesh and Karnataka.
  • The provision was not limited to confidence motions or money bills (which are quasi-confidence motions).
  • It applies to all votes in the House, on every Bill and every other issue.
  • It even applies to the Rajya Sabha and Legislative Councils, which have no say in the stability of the government.
  • Therefore, an MP (or MLA) has absolutely no freedom to vote their judgement on any issue.
    • They have to blindly follow the direction of the party. This provision goes against the concept of representative democracy.

Role of a Representative

  • There are two broadly accepted roles of a representative such as an MP in a democracy.
    • One is that they are agents of the voters and are expected to vote according to the wishes and for the benefits of their constituents.
    • The other is that their duty to their constituents is to exercise their judgement on various issues towards the broader public interest.
  • Anti-defection law makes the MP neither a delegate of the constituency nor a national legislator but converts them to be just an agent of the party.

A broken chain in India

  • Look at the contrast with other democracies.
    • For example, in the recent vote on the impeachment of former U.S. President Donald Trump, seven members from his party in the U.S. Senate, the Republicans, voted to convict him.
    • Such a decision does not have any legal repercussion. Of course, the party may take action (it did not).
    • Also, voters may decide to reject the legislator for re-election — and that is the core design element of representative democracy. The legislator is accountable to voters, and the government is accountable to legislators.
  • In India, this chain of accountability has been broken by making legislators accountable primarily to the party.
    • This means that anyone from the party having a majority in the legislature — which is, by definition, the party forming the government — is unable to hold the government to account.
    • Further, all legislators have a ready explanation for their voting behaviour: they had to follow the party’s direction.
    • This negates the concept of them having to justify their positions on various issues to the people who elected them to the post.

Eroding legislatures

  • An important consequence of the anti-defection law is the hollowing out of our legislatures.
  • The core role of an MP to examine and decide on policy, Bills and budgets is side-lined. Instead, the MP becomes just another number to be tallied by the party on any vote that it supports or opposes.
  • The framers of our Constitution did not intend this outcome.
  • While introducing the draft Constitution, Dr. B.R. Ambedkar outlined the differences between the presidential and parliamentary forms of government.
    • He said that the presidential form (such as in the United States) had higher stability but lower accountability as the President is elected for four years, and cannot be removed except for proven misdemeanour.
    • In the parliamentary form, the government is accountable on a daily basis through questions and motions, and can be removed any time it loses the support of the majority of members of the Lok Sabha.
    • The drafting committee believed that India needed a government that was accountable, even at the cost of stability.
  • The anti-defection bill weakens the accountability mechanism.

Inducing instability

  • The political system has found ways to topple governments.
  • This includes the methods used in Puducherry this week — of reducing the total membership through resignations.
    • The Constitution was amended to ensure that any person disqualified for defecting cannot get a ministerial position unless they are re-elected; the way around this has been to resign rather than vote against the party.
    • In other instances, the Speaker — usually from the ruling party — has delayed taking a decision on the disqualification.
    • This has led to strange situations such as members who continue to be part of the main Opposition party becoming Ministers (Andhra Pradesh in the term of the last Assembly).
    • The Supreme Court has tried to plug this by ruling that the Speaker has to take the decision in three months, but it is not clear what would happen if a Speaker does not do so.
  • The premise that the anti-defection law is needed to punish legislators who betray the mandate given by the voters also seems to be flawed.
  • If voters believe that they have been betrayed by the defectors, they can vote them out in the next election.
    • However, we have seen many of the defectors in States such as Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh being re-elected in the by-polls, which were held due to their disqualification.

Conclusion

  • If stability of government is an issue due to people defecting from their parties, the answer is for parties to strengthen their internal systems.
  • To sum up, the anti-defection law has been detrimental to the functioning of our legislatures as deliberative bodies which hold the executive to account on behalf of citizens.
  • It has not even done the job of preserving the stability of governments. The Tenth Schedule to the Constitution must be repealed.

Source: TH


Oceanic Anoxic Event 1a and MASS EXTINCTION

Oceanic Anoxic Event 1a from the Paris Basin (Environment) Paper-3 PMP OAE 1a refers to a period during the Cretaceous Period (145 million years ago and ended 66 million years ago) when Earth's oceans became depleted of oxygen, causing a significant disruption in marine life.  Cause: The event is believed to have been

Viksit Panchayat Karmayogi (Good governance)

Viksit Panchayat Karmayogi (Good governance) Governance GS PAPER-2 PMP Dr. Jitendra Singh launched the ‘Viksit Panchayat Karmayogi’ initiative on Good Governance Day, celebrated to mark the 100th birth anniversary of former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. The initiative, which is part of the broader ‘Prashasan Gaon

Major programmes to control Air Pollution

Major programmes to control Air Pollution National Clean Air Programme? It was launched by the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC) in January 2019. It is the first-ever effort in the country to frame a national framework for air quality management with a time-bound reduction target. The

Air pollution and Air quality Measures in India

Air pollution and Air quality Measures in India (Environment) GS Paper-3 P-M-P Air pollution may be defined as the presence of any solid, liquid or gaseous substance including noise and radioactive radiation in the atmosphere in such concentration that may be directly and/or indirectly injurious to humans or other l

Geopolitical Significance of Ports

Geopolitical Significance of Ports (IR)  Act as geopolitical assets: Ports enhance the projection of strategic reach, which helps strengthen the country’s control over important sea and energy supply routes.  E.g. Indian Navy’s staging base at Agalega Islands will enable marine patrols

Toppers

Search By Date

Newsletter Subscription
SMS Alerts

Important Links

UPSC GS Mains Crash Course - RAW Prelims Answer Key 2024