
Hold overdue Maharashtra local polls within 4 months, Supreme Court tells state election panel

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The Hindu
12 minutes ago
- The Hindu
SC cannot intervene until ‘Bill' becomes law after Governor's assent: Puducherry
Union Territory of Puducherry has seconded the Presidential Reference, saying a Bill does not become law until the Governor or the President assents. Puducherry's affidavit, signed by Chief Secretary Sharat Chauhan, said judiciary should not get entangled at the stage of Bill and intervene in inchoate legislative policymaking. The Union Territory agreed with the Centre that the President and Governors have discretionary powers under Article 201 and 200 while dealing with the question of approval of State Bills. These discretions were not justiciable. The 63-page affidavit disagreed with the April 8 judgment of the apex court in the Tamil Nadu Governor case fixing timelines for the President and the Governors, noting the Constitution did not fix any specific time limits for them. 'The silence of the Constitution was conscious and purposeful, intended to uphold the institutional discretion, dignity and gravitas of the offices of President and Governor… It is worth noting that the judiciary cannot usurp the role of the legislature and decide as to which Bill is to be passed or within what timeframe the Bill would come into effect. It is wholly, completely and unambiguously, a legislative function under the purview and ambit of the legislature and such functions cannot be exercised by the courts,' Puducherry pointed out. The Union Territory argued that judicial review could take place only after a Bill became law. The Supreme Court cannot assume the powers of the President and Governors and grant 'deemed assent' to State Bills. This would only lead to the court becoming a judge in its own case later on when the constitutionality of the law came to be challenged in court. 'In case of such deemed assents through use of Article 142, not only would the legislative domain be breached but the courts would become a judge in their own cause, if those laws were to be challenged judicially or taken up for judicial review,' the Union Territory reasoned. eom


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Some governors acting like mafia hitmen against citizens: Tushar Gandhi
T'puram: Criticizing the role of governors, Tushar Gandhi , the great grandson of Mahatma Gandhi , said that some governors are like hitmen used by mafias against citizens. "There are two types of governors in the country. One type is sent to BJP-ruled states to enjoy a retired life. The second type is sent to opposition-ruled states with instructions to disrupt governance. These governors act as super vice-chancellors and disrupt higher education, forgetting their duties to protect the Constitution and improve democracy," Gandhi said. Gandhi's remarks came while he was inaugurating a national seminar organized by the Kerala Sasthra Sahithya Parishad here on the challenges faced by universities. "The educated upper class in India is becoming more irrational, falling victim to the false propaganda experiments conducted by communal forces. They have been made to believe that Hindus are in danger and will soon be wiped out. These forces ensure that the majority supports any atrocities they commit, paving the way for the persecution of minorities," he said. The education system, which lacks rational thinking and promotes enslavement, aids this process, Gandhi added. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like American Investor Warren Buffett Recommends: 5 Books For Turning Your Life Around Blinkist: Warren Buffett's Reading List Undo He said that Centre's National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 maintains a flawed perspective on education and creates a system that further enslaves students. "Today's education hides realities, eliminates rational thinking, and fosters a slave mentality, becoming a tool to propagate the interests of those in power. People in every region must take responsibility to counter these issues. States should have the right to develop their educational systems, creating an education model that aligns with their culture and region," Gandhi said. Stay updated with the latest local news from your city on Times of India (TOI). Check upcoming bank holidays , public holidays , and current gold rates and silver prices in your area.


New Indian Express
an hour ago
- New Indian Express
Some parties ignored voter roll checks in time: ECI defends deletions; Congress raises concern
NEW DELHI: Days after the Supreme Court directed the Election Commission of India (ECI) to publish a list of 65 lakh deleted voter names in Bihar along with the reasons, the poll body, in a statement on Saturday, said that utmost transparency is the hallmark of electoral roll preparation, as per law, rules, and guidelines. The statement comes a day ahead of Leader of the Opposition Rahul Gandhi's fortnight-long Vote Adhikar Yatra, scheduled to begin on Sunday in Bihar. In a veiled reference to the allegations of the Congress on irregularities in voters' lists, the ECI said it seemed to the panel that some political parties and their booth-level agents (BLAs) did not examine the electoral rolls at the appropriate time and did not point out errors, if any, to Sub-Divisional Magistrates/ Electoral Registration Officers, District Election Officers or Chief Election Officers. It further said that it continues to welcome the scrutiny of electoral rolls by political parties and any elector. Responding to the ECI, Congress general secretary K C Venugopal said the ECI has crossed all limits of shamelessness by shrugging all its responsibilities in the face of grave allegations of vote theft and mass rigging. Constitutional authorities are expected to be the epitome of probity - not hide behind vaguely drafted press notes to mask their guilt in destroying democracy, he said in a statement. The tone and tenor of the press note raise greater suspicions that the ECI will take no steps to address the public's grave concerns about mass-scale vote rigging allegedly done by the BJP-controlled poll body, he said. 'If the ECI 'welcomes the scrutiny of electoral rolls', the Chief Election Commissioner and other ECs must come clean on why they still refuse to provide parties with machine-readable electoral rolls and why CCTV footage is being deleted,' Venugopal added. The ECI, in its statement, reiterated that pure electoral rolls strengthen democracy, and political parties are involved at each stage of their preparation. 'Appropriate time and opportunity are given to electors and political parties to rectify errors, if any. The election system for Parliament and Assembly elections in India is a multi-layered decentralised construct as envisaged by law,' it said.