![President of India is not all a glorified cipher. He represents the majesty of the State, is at the apex, through only symbolically and has rapport with the people and the parties. Comment [ 1982, U.P.J.S ]](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg_LRurWBrECAGnGnRfc8gmjhLxTOu1jJkR1aBpVyQsjoQO7eYd3BADOCMvWdA2wrpOKnW1N-R0wnv-UkTeHuWnRR0WxfnWeB0STQ-RCyAh80Jd-3p1SqGChZmZc13J3c5rtMErdqdxV0o/w700/273_EBC_Master%252BGuide%252Bto%252BJudicial%252BServices%252BExamination%255B%255D.png)
President of India is not all a glorified cipher. He represents the majesty of the State, is at the apex, through only symbolically and has rapport with the people and the parties. Comment [ 1982, U.P.J.S ]
INTRODUCTION .
General
The recent years
political happening reveals that, the coalition politics has come to stay in
India, attempting to replace the one party dominance that had been so prominent
till the year 1977. The multiparty system has resulted in break-down of one
party rule at the centre which has been in existence for thirty years. The
increase in number of regional parties based on regional culture, religion and
language has fragmented our national politics which in turn has caused loss to
the national parties.
In the General
Elections held in 1977, the people of India had not given clear verdict to any
of the single political party. The governments were formed by the support of
the other parties or with the combination of many parties at the centre. It is
true that Indian experience of coalition politics since 1977 onwards does not
give rise to optimism.
However, there is a
vast difference between the situation in Europe and India. The political
parties in Europe are mostly on ideology basis, though one does come across a
small number of regional or ethnic identities. The ideology based parties
function within a framework of agreed consensus on national interests and
goals, though they may differ on their approaches to achieve them. In India, there
are large numbers of parties which are based on identity and not on ideology
alone. These parties are divided into those
arising out
regionalist, linguistic identities and caste identities. Since they are not
ideology based, especially on an overall national basis, their parties focus is
on maximizing the gains and influences of their parties and leadership, and
relentlessly pursues its own interests.
Experience of the
coalition governments at the centre in 1977, 1989 and 1996 and in 1998 General
Elections has not been encouraging. P''our governments at the centre had been
ousted from power in a span or three years since 1996. Thrice in three years we
have gone to the polls. Despite three General Elections held during the period
from 1996 to 1999, the Indian voters did not elect a Parliament which could
ensure stable governance. Each time, the outcome was a fractured verdict and
tlie government elected was incapable of withstanding political upheaveals and
rendered unableness to govern for a full term of five \'ears.
These coalition
governments were the result of a group or ind)\iduals or political parties.
Indian society which is plural in ctiaracter and traditional in beha\ior is
divided into caste, race, religion and language. It has found its manifestation
in the General Election and the outcome is a coalition government.
Coalition formations
are a familiar phenomenon in the Western countries. Coalition governments have
an impressive record all over the world today and they seem to have come to
stay as an integral part of the Parliamentar)' system.^ Germany is a shining
example of successive successful coalition governments. Holland, Belgium and
some of Scandinavian countries have also demonstrated how coalition governments
can function successfully. Italy is a classic case where se\eral political
parties getting together and forming coalition government from time to time,
and performing with reasonable success. Switzerland is another good example.
All these countries are
much different from India from the point of view of complexity of problems such
as regional, linguistic and sociocultural. Yet they have not been striving for
single party governments with too frequent elections aiming at the creation of
such governments. In fact coalition governments seem to offer a new solution
for countries like India in the days to come for both stability and wider
acceptability of governments.
Elections have become a
great financial burden on our country. It was estimated by the Election
Commission during the 2009 General Elections that the Election Commission has
spent nearly ?1,120 crore on the entire poll process. In addition to this
expenditure, there is a lot of unaccounted money spent by candidates on their
campaigns. However, elections are necessary for Indian democracy. Having more
elections in this milieu is not going to improve accountability or governance,
though the elections are a means to enforce accountability. However, the need
of accountability is not only once in five years at election time, but in all
the months in between. This has to be achieved by the rule of law not by even
more elections. Indian democracy needs accountability not stability. Stability
without accountability represents a kernel of autocracy, even if covered by the
husk of elections.
Everytime, Indian
voters' verdict had reflected their choice in coalition government, especially
in last four General Elections which were held in 1996, 1998, 1999 and 2009.
The results of these elections had painted a picture of fractured Parliament.
The constitutional crisis was created whenever it was facing a situation of
Hung Parliament.
Nothing was said or
implied in the Constitution which could be interpreted as giving unfettered
discretion to the President in this regard. Thus, the Constituent Assembly
failed to provide a definitive conclusion on the method to be adopted by the
President for appointment of the Prime Minister of India in the situation when
no single part\' or alliance is able to provide majority in the House, no
settled norms were provided to the President and he was left to depend on
conventions \\hich are yet to develop in India.
According to Dr. B.R.
Ambedkar, the President has no discretionary functions at all. All that he will
have are certain prerogatives, but not functions, one prerogative is the
appointment of the Prime Minister and other is the dissolution of Parliament.
With regard to the Prime Minister, it is not possible to avoid vesting the
discretion in the President. The only other way is to require that it is the
House which shall in the first instance choose its leader and then, on the
choice being made by a motion or a resolution, the President would proceed to
appoint the Prime-Minister.-
In either case the
purpose is to test the confidence of Parliament in the new Prime Minister. The
confidence could be reflected before assuming office, through a resolution as
pointed out above or after assuming office through a no-confidence motion. Dr.
Ambedkar in this regard thus stated:
"One way is as
good as the other and it is, therefore felt desirable to leave this matter in
the discretion of the President with regard to the dissolution of the House,
again there is no definite opinion so far as the British constitutional lawyers
are concerned. There is a view held that the President or the King must accept
the advice of the Prime Minister for a dissolution if he finds that the House
has become recalcitrant or that the House does not represent the wishes of the
people. There is also the other view that notwithstanding the advice of the
Prime Minister and his Cabinet, the President, if he thinks that the House has
ceased to represent the wishes of the people, can suo-moto and of his own
accord dissolve the House. These are purely prerogatives and they do not come
within the administration of the country."'
Till recent years.
Presidents have generally accepted that they have few powers and no active role
in government.s They had, perhaps, little choice as until the 1990's we have
had Prime Ministers who led parties with large majorities in the Lok Sabha.
Circumstances have changed since 1990's when we have had weak coalition
governments. In the resulting uncertainty. Presidents have been playing an
active role in selecting who or which party is to head the next government.
This is, it should be said at once, one field where the President must, out of necessity-,
act on his own as there is no Council of Ministers which can advise him. His
role becomes vital when many MPs are independents, or belong to small parties,
which can be persuaded to support any party' leader who offers them ministerial
posts or other inducements.
No President can easily
assess which party wall end up as obtainmg majority support; so the President
has generally followed the safe course of first inviting the largest single
party. This can lead, at times, to absurd consequences as when the President
invited the BJP to dci so in 1996; as several MPs, constituting the majority
had then declared that they would not support the BJP government. This was the
unedifving spectacle of a very short lived first Vajpayee government.
The practice of
inviting the leader of the largest single party to have the first chance,
whilst sanctified by convention, and having the ad\'antage of atleast forming
an easy-to-understand and easy to follow rule has some most unattractive
features.^ It not only might result in a ven- short-lived government, but it
almost encourages Prime Minister to "6uj/" support by promising office
to unworthy and undeserving MPs.
It is worth considering
if, instead, the President should insist on the leader of the majority party
first securing a vote of confidence, and then, inviting him to form a
government. The fickleness of our MPs continues even after a government is in
office. So, when the AIADMK Part) withdrew support from the second Vajpayee
government, it was doubtful whether Sh. Atal Bihari Vajpayee still enjoyed the
support of a majoritv' of the Lok Sabha.
The President took an
unusual course; he directed that Sh. Atal Bihari Vajpayee should secure a vote
of confidence. Surely the proper !:ourse of action was for the President to
have done nothing and waited to see, if a resolution expressing no confidence
would have passed. "The twelfth Lok Sabha withdrew its thrust in the
Council of Ministers on 1/^ April, 1999 when the motion that this House
expresses it confidence in the council of ministers" was defeated on the
floor by the narrowest margin of just a single vote with 269 members voting in
favour of the confidence motion moved by Sh. Atal Bihari Vajpayee and 270
against it.7 This was the fifth time when Lok Sabha was dissolved without
completion of its full tenure and had been a shortest Lok Sabha in Indian
history.
The situation becomes
worse during the long hiatus between the dissolution of the Lok Sabha and the
meeting of the next one, a hiatus inevitable due to the sheer complexity of
organizing elections in so vast a country. During this period, the government,
it is said, is a "care taker" government. No such concept is known to
the Constitution of India. During this period, the President is said to have
insisted on a number of decisions which is impossible to justify such actions
on the part of an indirectly elected President.
Justice V.R. Krishna
Iyer has made a comment on the role of the President that: "The President
in India is not at all a glorified cipher. He represents the majesty of the
State, at the apex, though only symbolically, and has rapport with the people
and parties, being above politics. His vigilant presence makes for good
government if he only uses, what Bagehot described, as the right to be consulted,
to warn and encourage."
Shamsher Singh &
Anr vs State Of Punjab on 23 August, 1974
In Blackstone's
commentaries on the Laws of England, said Dicey, students might read that the
Constitution concentrated all executive power in the hands of the King. The
language of this passage', he remarked, is impressive...... It has but one
fault : the statements it contains are the direct opposite of the truth".'
The President in India is not at all a glorified cipher. He represents the
majesty of the State, is at the apex, though only symbolically, and has rapport
with the people and parties, being above politics. His vigilant presence makes
for good government if only he uses, what Bagehot described as, the right to be
consulted, to warn and encourage'. Indeed, Art.
78 wisely used, keeps the President in close touch with the
Prime Minister on matters of national importance and policy significance, and
there is no doubt that the imprint of his personality may chasten and correct
the political government, although the actual exercise of the functions entrusted
to him by law is in effect and in law carried on by his duly appointed mentors.
i.e., the Prime Minister and his colleagues. In short, the President, like the
King, has not merely been constitutionally romanticized but actually vested
with a pervasive and persuasive role. Political theorists are quite conversant
with the dynamic role of the Crown which keeps away from politics and power (1)
AIR 1971 SC 1551.
Similarly, the
President is entrusted with powers and duties covering a wide range by the Articles
of the Constitution. Indeed, he is the Supreme Commander of the Armed
Forces (Art 53(2)), appoints Judges of the Supreme Court and the
High Courts and determines the latter's age when dispute arises, has
power to refer questions for the Advisory opinion of the Supreme Court.(Art
143) and has power to hold that Government of a State cannot be carried in
accordance with the Constitution (Art. 356). The Auditor-General, the
Attorney General, the Governors and the entire army of public servants hold
office during the pleasure of the President. Bills cannot become law, even if
passed by Parliament, without the assent of the President. Recognizing and
derecognising rulers of former native States of India is a power vested in the
President. The extraordinary powers of legislation by Ordinances, dispensing
with enquiries against public servants before dismissal, declaration of
emergency and imposition of President's rule by proclamation upon States. are
vast powers of profound significance. Indeed, even the power of summoning and
proroguing and dissolving the House of the People and returning Bills passed by
the Parliament belongs to him. If only we expand the ratio of Sardarilal (2)
and Jayantilal (12) to every function which the various Articles of the
Constitution confer on the President or the Governor, Parliamentary democracy
will become a dope and national elections a numerical exercise in expensive
futility. We will be compelled to hold that there are two parallel authorities
exercising powers of governance of the country, as in the dyarchy days, except
that Whitehall is substituted by Rashtrapati Bhavan and Raj Bhawan. The Cabinet
will shrink at Union and State levels in political and administrative authority
and,, having solemn regard to the gamut of his powers and
responsibilities, the Head of State will be a reincarnation of Her Majesty's
Secretary of State for India, untroubled by even the British Parliament-a
little taller in power than the American President, Such a distortion, by
interpretation, it appears to us, would virtually amount to a subversion of the
structure, substance and vitality of our Republic, particularly when we
remember that Governors are but appointed functionaries and the President
himself is elected on a limited indirect basis. As we have already indicated
the overwhelming catena of authorities of this Court have established
over the decades that the cabinet form.-of Government and the Parliamentary
system have been adopted in India and the contrary concept must be rejected as
incredibly allergic to our political genius, constitutional creed and culture.
Before we conclude on
this part of the case we remind ourselves that so long as the Constitution
shall endure-no one can say how long, each generation being almost a separate
nation this Court must exist with it, deciding in the peaceful forms
of forensic proceeding, the delicate and dangerous controversies inter alia,
between sub-soverei- gnties and citizens. And the pronouncements of this summit
tribunal being law under Art. 141, it binds until reinterpreted
differently and competently. But as Judges we have solemnly to remind ourselves
of the words of the historian of the U. S. Supreme Court, Mr. Charles
Warren:
0 Comments: