
Timelines for Prez, Guvs will lead to constitutional disorder, Centre tells SC
Solicitor General Tushar Mehta has said this in a written submissions filed in the Presidential Reference raising constitutional issues on whether timelines could be imposed for dealing with bills passed by a state Assembly.
'The alleged failure, inaction or error of one organ does not and cannot authorise another organ to assume powers that the Constitution has not vested in it.
If any organ is permitted to arrogate to itself the functions of another on a plea of public interest or institutional dissatisfaction or even on the justification derived from the Constitution ideals, the consequence would be a constitutional disorder not envisaged by its framers,' he said.
A note filed by Solicitor Mehta has argued that the apex court imposing fixed timelines would dissolve the delicate equilibrium that the Constitution has established and negate the rule of law.
'The perceived lapses, if any, are to be addressed through constitutionally-sanctioned mechanisms, such as electoral accountability, legislative oversight, executive responsibility, reference procedures or consultative process amongst democratic organs etc. Thus, Article 142 does not empower the court to create a concept of 'deemed assent', turning the constitutional and legislative process on its head,' it reads.
The positions of the governor and president are 'politically plenary' and represent 'high ideals of democratic governance'. Any perceived lapses, the note says, must be addressed through political and constitutional mechanisms, and not necessarily through 'judicial' interventions.
Mehta has contended that Articles 200 and 201, which deal with the governors' and president's alternatives after receiving a state bill, deliberately contain no timelines.
'When the Constitution seeks to impose time limits for taking certain decisions, it specifically mentions such time limits. Where it has consciously kept the exercise of powers flexible, it does not impose any fixed time limit,' Mehta has said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Economic Times
29 minutes ago
- Economic Times
NESO seeks special commission to revise voter rolls, opposes CAA in Northeast
Northeast Students' Organisation has appealed to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah regarding illegal immigration. They want a special commission to revise electoral rolls and remove foreigners. NESO also opposes the Citizenship Amendment Act in the Northeast. The organization highlights demographic changes and insecurity among indigenous people. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads The Northeast Students' Organisation ( NESO ) has urged Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah to set up a Special Commission for extensive revision of electoral rolls. The student body said the exercise should detect and delete the names of foreigners and illegal immigrants from the voter list within a fixed time the apex body of eight students' organisations from the Northeastern states, held demonstrations across seven states on Monday. The group also called on the Centre not to implement the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019, in the separate memorandums sent to the Prime Minister, the Union Home Minister and the Chief Ministers of the Northeast, NESO highlighted the challenges posed by what it described as the continued influx of illegal migrants from neighbouring countries.'The unabated influx of illegal migrants has brought serious demographic changes in the Northeast region in particular and other parts of the country in general,' the memorandum, signed by NESO Chairman Samuel B. Jyrwa and Secretary General Mutsikhoyo Yhobu, group said that refugees and undocumented migrants had created insecurity among indigenous people, who fear the loss of culture, tradition, political identity, and control over land.'The unguarded porous border has been used by fundamentalist groups to infiltrate into the region, thereby further threatening the existence of the indigenous people. There is every reason to believe that there are already a considerable number of militant fundamentalist groups operating in the Northeast with a design to overrun the whole of NE according to their whims and fancies,' the memorandum also voiced concern over the non-implementation of the Assam Accord of 1985, calling for a review of its clauses after nearly four organisation further demanded extension of the Inner Line Permit (ILP) across the entire region. The ILP, enforced under the Bengal Eastern Frontier Regulation of 1873, is a travel document that allows Indian citizens entry into certain Northeastern states for a limited period and purpose. It is currently applicable in Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Mizoram and also pressed the Centre to update the National Register of Citizens (NRC) of 1951, calling it the only official document on citizenship in the region.


Time of India
29 minutes ago
- Time of India
NESO seeks special commission to revise voter rolls, opposes CAA in Northeast
Northeast Students' Organisation has appealed to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah regarding illegal immigration. They want a special commission to revise electoral rolls and remove foreigners. NESO also opposes the Citizenship Amendment Act in the Northeast. The organization highlights demographic changes and insecurity among indigenous people. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads The Northeast Students' Organisation ( NESO ) has urged Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah to set up a Special Commission for extensive revision of electoral rolls. The student body said the exercise should detect and delete the names of foreigners and illegal immigrants from the voter list within a fixed time the apex body of eight students' organisations from the Northeastern states, held demonstrations across seven states on Monday. The group also called on the Centre not to implement the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019, in the separate memorandums sent to the Prime Minister, the Union Home Minister and the Chief Ministers of the Northeast, NESO highlighted the challenges posed by what it described as the continued influx of illegal migrants from neighbouring countries.'The unabated influx of illegal migrants has brought serious demographic changes in the Northeast region in particular and other parts of the country in general,' the memorandum, signed by NESO Chairman Samuel B. Jyrwa and Secretary General Mutsikhoyo Yhobu, group said that refugees and undocumented migrants had created insecurity among indigenous people, who fear the loss of culture, tradition, political identity, and control over land.'The unguarded porous border has been used by fundamentalist groups to infiltrate into the region, thereby further threatening the existence of the indigenous people. There is every reason to believe that there are already a considerable number of militant fundamentalist groups operating in the Northeast with a design to overrun the whole of NE according to their whims and fancies,' the memorandum also voiced concern over the non-implementation of the Assam Accord of 1985, calling for a review of its clauses after nearly four organisation further demanded extension of the Inner Line Permit (ILP) across the entire region. The ILP, enforced under the Bengal Eastern Frontier Regulation of 1873, is a travel document that allows Indian citizens entry into certain Northeastern states for a limited period and purpose. It is currently applicable in Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Mizoram and also pressed the Centre to update the National Register of Citizens (NRC) of 1951, calling it the only official document on citizenship in the region.
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
29 minutes ago
- Business Standard
Centre releases ₹36,027 crore to states under special assistance scheme
The Centre has released ₹36,027 crore to all states and union territories under the Scheme for Special Assistance to States for Capital Expenditure and Investment (SASCI) till 11 August, according to a Parliament reply by Pankaj Chaudhary, Minister of State for Finance, on Monday. Chaudhary said that total funds amounting to ₹3,66,249.45 crore have been released by the government to states under the scheme since its inception in FY21 up to FY25. According to the Parliament reply, under certain parts of the scheme, incentives are provided to states by the Centre for carrying out reforms in different sectors. In 2024-25, 22 states availed these incentives by implementing land-related reforms in rural areas, and 22 for reforms aimed at stimulating industrial growth through regulations for industrial and commercial buildings. None of the states could utilise the incentive linked to land reforms in urban areas, the Lok Sabha reply showed. The government has used the tied portion of the SASCI as a policy lever to encourage states to undertake reforms and boost capital expenditure through 50-year interest-free loans. The scheme was launched in the pandemic year FY21 with an allocation of ₹12,000 crore. In 2024-25, the government allocated ₹1,50,000 crore for the scheme, which was almost fully utilised. A similar amount has been earmarked for the current financial year as well. In FY26, till 11 August 2025, the highest allocation was released to Uttar Pradesh (₹6,065.96 crore), followed by Bihar (₹3,136 crore). Rajasthan (₹2,669 crore), Madhya Pradesh (₹2,618 crore) and Maharashtra (₹2,230 crore) were the other states among the top five recipients so far.