New Delhi: Even as 37 of his 53 MLAs apparently defected and joined hands with the BJP-Shiv Sena government in Maharashtra, NCP chief Sharad Pawar was quick to say on Sunday evening that he would not fight a legal battle, but would go directly to the people. Will choose option. , Hours after his nephew Ajit Pawar claimed that the NCP would forge an alliance with the BJP in the 2024 Lok Sabha and Maharashtra Assembly polls, the 82-year-old Pawar said the issues of vertical division in the party and Ajit Pawar’s claim have to be fought legally. there’s no need. On the name and symbol of the NCP party. The NCP chief expressed his resolve to rebuild his party.
The statements of the Maratha leader, who has spent over five decades in politics, suggest that his faction may not follow the path that the Uddhav Thackeray-led Shiv Sena camp took last year under strange circumstances. The senior Pawar’s malaise may perhaps add to the rulings of the Supreme Court and the Election Commission of India (ECI) after Thackeray resorted to an uphill legal battle after Eknath Shinde launched a similar rebellion that led to the Shiv Sena last year. There was a split in A closer look at the uncanny similarity between the two rebellions and the Army vs. Army decisions may provide some clues as to why Sharad Pawar chose to go to the people’s court instead of fighting it out with a team of veteran lawyers.
Ajit Pawar’s rebellion had a glimpse of Eknath Shinde’s rebellion in June last year. Shinde formed a group of majority MLAs in the Shiv Sena, declared support to the ruling central government and staked claim on the parent party. While disqualification petitions were filed against Shinde and the MLAs supporting him under the anti-defection law, he went to the ECI claiming that his faction was the original Shiv Sena and not Thackeray’s. Petition after petition was filed by the Thackeray camp to stop Shinde from joining the Shiv Sena. But in June last year, Shinde not only managed to become chief minister within 24 hours after opting to resign rather than face the floor test, but also secured the party’s name and symbol. Meanwhile, disqualification petitions are pending against Shinde and the MLAs supporting him.
Following a similar blueprint, Ajit Pawar on Sunday joined the Shinde-Fadnavis government, claiming the support of a majority of NCP legislators. He took oath as Deputy Chief Minister along with eight other NCP colleagues. Ajit Pawar, like Shinde, rejected the argument that he has led a group of defectors who face the rigors of the anti-defection law under the Tenth Schedule of the Constitution. Instead, Ajit Pawar similarly indicated on Sunday and again on Monday that he is the one who represents the “real” NCP and that he would contest all upcoming elections on the NCP’s election symbol – the clock.
Within hours of the rebellion, state NCP president Jayant Patil hit back and announced that the party has filed disqualification petitions against nine rebel MLAs, including Ajit Pawar, who was inducted as a minister in the Shinde-Fadnavis government . “We have requested Speaker Rahul Narvekar to hear our side,” Patil said. He said that he has also approached the ECI.
While Ajit Pawar has clearly followed the template successfully executed by Shinde last year, the senior Pawar is acutely aware of the adverse consequences that Thackeray faced despite a fierce legal battle before the Supreme Court and the Election Commission.
Supreme Court’s decision in the case of Army Vs.
Some of the important issues before a five-judge constitution bench in the Sena vs Sena case were related to the formation of a new government in Maharashtra by Shinde after the Governor’s decision to call a floor test, which had led to the resignation of Uddhav Thackeray. Even though these issues are absent in the latest episode of rebellion, the Supreme Court, in a May 11 judgment, went into detail to clarify the legal position on disqualification of rebel MLAs, recognition of a political party inside the House and allocation. Name and symbol of a party. All these controversies are sure to arise in the latest controversy related to NCP.
On Monday morning, NCP state president Patil said the nine MLAs were disqualified at the same time they took oath as ministers in the Maharashtra government. However, the apex court’s May judgment makes it clear that there is no concept of “automatic disqualification” under the anti-defection law, and the Speaker has the exclusive right to decide such petitions.
In Sena vs Sena, the Thackeray faction instituted disqualification petitions against Shinde and several other MLAs supporting him. Before the bench, they argued that a decision on these petitions should not be left to Narwekar, who is a BJP leader, and that the court should instead decide the disqualification pleas by itself to ensure fairness. Shooting down this request, the court ruled that the Speaker is “the appropriate constitutional authority to decide the question of disqualification under the Tenth Schedule”.
Even as the court quashed Narwekar’s decisions on July 3, 2022, to recognise Shinde as the leader of the Shiv Sena legislature party and Bharat Gogawale as the chief whip, it left it to the BJP leader to recognise the new leader of the Shiv Sena legislature party and the chief whip again following an enquiry by him into the state of affairs when there could be two factions of the same party. The May verdict made Narwekar emerge as the exclusive authority to take a call on the spectrum of controversies — from deciding the disqualification petitions to identifying the “real” Shiv Sena; from recognising the new chief whip of Shiv Sena to notifying its leader of the House.
Thus, the process to decide disqualification petitions against Ajit Pawar and the MLAs supporting him, and the identification of the “real” NCP inside the House, will have to follow the same legal principles with Narwekar holding all the cards.
In Sena vs Sena, the Constitution bench also articulated some important principles for ECI to take note of in adjudication of disputes between two rival factions of a political party. It ruled that pendency of disqualification proceedings against members of a rival faction in a political party will not prevent ECI from deciding a dispute before it under Paragraph 15 of the Election Symbols (Reservation and Allotment) Order, 1968, for allotment of the party symbol.
In its ruling, the top court rejected Thackeray’s plea that there should be a “constitutional sequence” that proceedings under the anti-defection law must be decided by Speaker before ECI decides the dispute under the Symbols Order.
The May 11 judgment maintained that since no deadline could be set for the Speaker to decide a disqualification plea, keeping the symbol dispute on hold until the Speaker’s decision would amount to indefinitely staying the proceedings before ECI. The judgment gave ECI the liberty to go ahead and allot the party name and symbol to any one faction, uninfluenced by the disqualification petitions.
The five-judge bench ruling further held that nothing prevents an MLA facing disqualification proceedings under the anti-defection law from approaching ECI for the allotment of a party symbol – a legal principle that may come handy for the Ajit Pawar faction. The judgment further advised the poll body to look beyond the test of legislative majority and consider some other parameters too, such as an evaluation of the majority in the organisational wings of the political party or an analysis of the provisions of the party constitution, before ruling in favour of a faction. The bench was, however, quick to add a caveat that it is for ECI to decide which are the tests best suited to the unique facts and circumstances of the case before it. Therefore, the Supreme Court verdict boils down to strengthening the Speaker’s hands and green-lighting ECI to decide the array of disputes when a party undergoes a vertical split.
Election Commission verdict in Sena vs Sena
Soon after breaking ranks with Thackeray, Shinde approached ECI for the allotment of the bow-and-arrow symbol of Shiv Sena to the faction led by him. By a decision on February 17, 2022, ECI ruled that Shinde’s faction will inherit the original party’s name and its symbol, capping an eight-month-long feud between the two leaders over control of the regional party.
ECI, in its judgment, followed the procedure laid down in a 1971 Supreme Court judgment in the Sadiq Ali case, which said such disputes must be decided on the basis of a triple test. ECI found that the conclusion of the first two benchmarks were inconclusive.
The first test — objectives of the party constitution — was deemed improper because the 2018 constitution of Shiv Sena was found to be undemocratic and concentrated power in the hands of a few. The second test — that of the majority in the organisational body of the party — was also not considered because the poll panel found that neither side provided accurate details of the composition of internal bodies, and no determinable or satisfactory findings could be ascertained.
Therefore, ECI relied on the third prong — the test of majority in the legislative wing. Here, the poll body found that 40 of the 55 members of legislative assembly backed the Shinde faction, which translated to 76% of the total votes polled by the unified party in the 2019 assembly elections. Moreover, 13 of the 18 Lok Sabha members of the party backed Shinde, which translated to 73% of the total votes polled in the 2019 general elections. While Thackeray has challenged ECI’s decision before the top court, the appeal is still pending while the Shinde faction has successfully retained the party name and symbol so far.
The judgments by the Supreme Court and ECI clearly bolstered Shinde’s position, particularly since he had the numbers. Known for his Machiavellian politics, the senior Pawar must be cognisant of the trajectory that the legal battle surrounding Shiv Sena followed. As far as Ajit Pawar’s fate is concerned, if he can manage to keep the flock together and plays his cards well in demonstrating the organisational support of the party, the legal principles evolved in Sena vs Sena seem to be weighing in his favour, at least for now. Much, though, will depend on the number of MLAs backing him.