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Anti-Defection Law

Anti-Defection Law

General Studies Paper II: Parliament, Constitutional Amendments

 

Why in News?

Recently, legal experts highlight that Raghav Chadha and six MPs may avoid disqualification under India’s anti-defection law, as their collective shift meets the constitutionally mandated two-thirds threshold.

Anti-Defection Law

What is Anti-Defection Law? 

  • Basic Concept: The Anti-Defection Law is a constitutional mechanism to prevent political defections by elected representatives. 
    • It ensures that legislators do not switch parties for personal gain, maintaining government stability in parliamentary democracy.
  • Historical Background: The law emerged after widespread defections in the 1960s–70s, especially the famous “Aaya Ram, Gaya Ram” phenomenon. 
    • Frequent party switching led to collapse of governments, prompting Parliament to introduce a legal framework to curb such instability.
  • Core Objective: Its primary aim is to ensure political stability, reduce corruption in politics, and uphold party discipline
    • It prevents elected representatives from betraying voter trust by switching loyalties for office, money, or power incentives.
  • Constitutional Basis: The law is contained in the Tenth Schedule of the Indian Constitution, inserted by the 52nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1985
    • It formally introduced the concept of political parties into the Constitution and defined rules for disqualification.
  • Defection Meaning: Defection occurs when a legislator voluntarily gives up party membership or acts against party interests.
    • It includes formal resignation or indirect actions indicating disloyalty, such as aligning with another party.
  • Applicability Scope: The law applies to Members of Parliament (MPs) and Members of Legislative Assemblies (MLAs)
    • It covers both elected and nominated members, ensuring uniform application across Parliament and State Legislatures.
  • Disqualification Grounds: A member can be disqualified if they:
  • Leave their political party voluntarily
  • Vote or abstain against party whip without permission
  • Join another party after election (These provisions form the core of Paragraph 2 of the Tenth Schedule). 
  • Whip System: Political parties issue a whip, directing members on how to vote. 
    • Violating the whip can lead to disqualification, reinforcing party discipline but also limiting individual legislative freedom. 
  • Exceptions Clause: The law allows exemption in case of a merger
    • If at least two-thirds of members of a legislative party agree to merge with another party, they are not disqualified.
    • This threshold was raised from one-third to two-thirds by the 91st Amendment Act, 2003
  • Decision Authority: The Speaker (Lok Sabha) or Chairman (Rajya Sabha/Legislative Council) decides disqualification cases. 
    • Their decision is subject to judicial review by courts to prevent misuse or bias.

Significance of Anti-Defection Law

  • Political Stability: This law prevents frequent government collapses caused by opportunistic floor-crossing. 
    • Before 1985, Haryana MLA Gaya Lal changed parties thrice in one day, creating the “Aaya Ram Gaya Ram” crisis. 
  • Party Discipline: It ensures that legislators adhere to the Party Whip during crucial votes. 
    • In the 2019 Lok Sabha, members followed party directives during no-confidence motions to preserve coalition cohesion. 
  • Electoral Integrity: The law protects the voter mandate by ensuring representatives do not betray the party platform they were elected on. 
    • It prevents a candidate elected on Party A’s ticket from immediately joining Party B for personal gain. 
  • Curbing Corruption: It reduces “horse-trading” where legislators are “bought” with money or ministerial berths. 
    • The 91st Amendment (2003) capped the Council of Ministers at 15% to stop the lure of excessive ministerial appointments.
  • Judicial Oversight: The law establishes a framework for Judicial Review to prevent arbitrary disqualifications. 
    • In the Kihoto Hollohan case (1992), the Supreme Court ruled that the Speaker’s decision is subject to review by High Courts. 

Aspects of Issues

  • Restricting Dissent: The law stifles the freedom of speech of legislators by forcing them to follow the party line blindly. 
  • In 1996, MP G. Vishwanathan was disqualified despite expressing views based on his conscience rather than party orders. 
  • Speaker Bias: The Presiding Officer, often a member of the ruling party, may act with political prejudice
    • In the Manipur Assembly (2020), delays in disqualifying defectors highlighted the Speaker’s potential for partisan behavior.
  • Decision Delays: There is no statutory timeframe for deciding cases, allowing defectors to continue as members indefinitely. 
    • The Supreme Court in the Keisham Meghachandra case (2020) had to suggest a 3-month deadline due to excessive delays.
  • Merger Loophole: The two-thirds merger rule allows “wholesale” defections while punishing individual “retail” ones. 
    • In Goa (2022), 8 out of 11 Congress MLAs defected to the BJP, avoiding penalty by claiming a legal merger.
  • Resignation Route: Legislators bypass the law by resigning to topple a government and then re-contesting on a new party ticket. 
    • In Madhya Pradesh (2020), 22 Congress MLAs resigned, leading to a government change and their subsequent re-election as BJP members. 

Way Forward 

  • External Adjudication: The 2nd Administrative Reforms Commission (ARC) and the NCRWC recommend shifting the power to disqualify from the Speaker to an external authority. 
    • They suggest the President or Governor should decide based on the binding advice of the Election Commission of India (ECI)
    • This would mirror the process for other disqualifications under Article 103 and ensure impartiality
  • Pre-Poll Coalitions: The 170th Law Commission Report proposed treating pre-poll electoral fronts as a single political party under the Tenth Schedule. 
    • Currently, parties in a coalition can switch sides without individual penalty if their party agrees. 
    • This reform would prevent post-election betrayals of the voter mandate by binding coalition partners to their pre-election promises.
  • Mandatory Re-elections: To deter the “resignation route,” experts suggest that any legislator who resigns or is disqualified should be barred from contesting by-elections for the remainder of the term
  • Internal Democracy: Strengthening intra-party democracy is vital to distinguish between genuine dissent and opportunistic defection. 
    • The Law Commission suggests mandatory internal party elections and transparent decision-making. 
    • This would prevent party leaders from using the Whip as a “dictatorial tool” to suppress legitimate criticism and policy disagreements within the party. 
  • Invalidating Votes: A measure suggested by the NCRWC is to treat the vote cast by a defector to topple a government as invalid.
    • If a member defies a whip during a No-Confidence Motion, their vote would not be counted toward the total. 
    • This removes the immediate legislative incentive to “buy” votes for government-toppling.
  • Ethical Conventions: Adopting the British convention, where the Speaker resigns from their party upon election to the post, could restore trust in the office. 
    • This ensures the Presiding Officer acts as a neutral “referee” rather than a partisan player.

Also Read: Cross-Voting in Rajya Sabha Elections

 

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