S. R. Bommai Case : The Detailed Analysis
๐ฐS. R. Bommai Case : The Detailed Analysis๐ฐ
๐บWho was S. R. Bommai?๐บ
๐ฟS. R. Bommai was the Chief Minister of the Janata Dal government in Karnataka between August 13, 1988 and April 21, 1989.
๐บWhat was the background of his case?๐บ
๐ฟHis government was dismissed on April 21, 1989 under Article 356 of the Constitution and President’s Rule was imposed, in what was then a mostly common mode to keep Opposition parties at bay.
๐ฟThe dismissal was on grounds that the Bommai government had lost majority following large-scale defections engineered by several party leaders of the day.
๐ฟThen Governor P. Venkatasubbaiah refused to give Bommai an opportunity to test his majority in the Assembly despite the latter presenting him with a copy of the resolution passed by the Janata Dal Legislature Party.
๐บWhat happened then?๐บ
๐ฟShri Bommai went to court against the Governor’s decision to recommend President’s Rule.
๐ฟFirst he moved the Karnataka High Court, which dismissed his writ petition. Then he moved the Supreme Court.
๐บWhat did the Supreme Court do?๐บ
๐ฟThe case, which would go on to become one of the most cited whenever hung Assemblies were returned, and parties scrambled to for a government, took almost five years to see a logical conclusion.
๐ฟOn March 11, 1994, a nine-judge Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court issued the historic order, which in a way put an end to the arbitrary dismissal of State governments under Article 356 by spelling out restrictions.
๐บWhat did the judgement say?๐บ
๐ฟThe verdict concluded that the power of the President to dismiss a State government is not absolute.
๐ฟThe verdict said the President should exercise the power only after his proclamation (imposing his/her rule) is approved by both Houses of Parliament. Till then, the Court said, the President can only suspend the Legislative Assembly by suspending the provisions of Constitution relating to the Legislative Assembly.
๐ฟ"The dissolution of Legislative Assembly is not a matter of course. It should be resorted to only where it is found necessary for achieving the purposes of the Proclamation," the Court said.
๐บWhat happens if the Presidential proclamation is not approved by the Parliament?๐บ
๐ฟ"In case both Houses of Parliament disapprove or do not approve the Proclamation, the Proclamation lapses at the end of the two-month period. In such a case, the government which was dismissed revives. The Legislative Assembly, which may have been kept in suspended animation gets reactivated," the Court said.
๐ฟAlso the Court made it amply clear that a Presidential Proclamation under Article 356 is subject to judicial review.
๐บWhat is the significance of the S. R. Bommai vs. Union of India case?๐บ
๐ฟThe case put an end to the arbitrary dismissal of State governments by a hostile Central government.
๐ฟAnd the verdict also categorically ruled that the floor of the Assembly is the only forum that should test the majority of the government of the day, and not the subjective opinion of the Governor, who is often referred to as the agent of the Central government.
๐ฟ"The Chief Minister of every State who has to discharge his constitutional functions will be in perpetual fear of the axe of Proclamation falling on him because he will not be sure whether he will remain in power or not and consequently he has to stand up every time from his seat without properly discharging his constitutional obligations and achieving the desired target in the interest of the State," the Court said.
๐บWhat was the verdict's impact first seen and how it is cited later?๐บ
๐ฟIn one of the first instances of the impact of the case, the A.B. Vajpayee government in 1999 forced to reinstate the Rabri Devi government it dismissed, when it became clear that it would suffer a defeat in the Rajya Sabha over the issue.
๐ฟAnd later, whenever the case of a hung Assembly, and the subsequent exercise of government formation, came up, the Bommai case would be cited, making it one of the most quoted historical verdicts in the political history of India.
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