• The Himachal Pradesh Assembly passed a Bill which will bar the members of the House who are disqualified under Tenth Schedule of the Constitution (anti-defection law) from drawing pension.
• The Bill would become Act after the consent of the Governor.
• The Himachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly (Allowances and Pension of Members) Amendment Bill 2024 was introduced by Chief Minister Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu.
• According to the Bill, “a person shall not be entitled for pension under the Act, if he has been disqualified at any point of time under the tenth schedule of the Constitution (anti-defection law)”.
• Under Section 6B of the Act, legislators who have served for up to five years are entitled to a monthly pension of Rs 36,000. Additionally, Section 6(e) stipulates that for every year of service beyond the initial five-year term, legislators will receive an extra pension of Rs 1,000 per month. This means that their pension will increase incrementally based on the length of their service beyond the first term.
What is anti-defection law?
• Defection may be defined as the practice of floor crossing by a member of one political outfit to another.
• The Constitution (Fifty-Second Amendment) Act, 1985 popularly known as the anti-defection law came into force on March 1, 1985.
• It amended articles 101, 102, 190 and 191 of the Constitution regarding vacation of seats and disqualification from membership of Parliament and the State Legislatures and added a new schedule — the Tenth Schedule — to the Constitution.
• The Tenth Schedule contains the following provisions with respect to the disqualification of members of Parliament and the state legislatures on the ground of defection.
• ‘House’ means either House of Parliament or the Legislative Assembly.
What are the grounds for defection?
A member of a House belonging to any political party becomes disqualified for being a member of the House if:
a) He/she voluntarily gives up his membership of such political party; or
b) He/she votes or abstains from voting in such House contrary to any direction issued by his political party without obtaining prior permission of such party and such act has not been condoned by the party within 15 days.
• An independent member of a House becomes disqualified to remain a member of the House if he joins any political party after such election.
• A nominated member of a House becomes disqualified for being a member of the House if he joins any political party after the expiry of six months from the date on which he takes his seat in the House.
Exceptions:
• Legislators may change their party without the risk of disqualification in certain circumstances.
• The law allows a party to merge with or into another party provided that at least two-thirds of its legislators are in favour of the merger.
• If a person is elected as the Speaker of Lok Sabha or the Chairman of Rajya Sabha, then he could resign from his party and rejoin the party once he demits that post.
• It must be noted here that the provision of the Tenth Schedule pertaining to exemption from disqualification in case of split by one-third members of legislature party has been deleted by the 91st Amendment Act of 2003.
Deciding authority: Any question regarding disqualification arising out of defection is to be decided by the presiding officer of the House.
Rule-making power: The presiding officer of a House is empowered to make rules to give effect to the provisions of the Tenth Schedule.
Some limitations of the law
No liability for political parties: It only punishes legislators for switching parties. Political parties who are at the heart of the politics have no liability under the law.
Problem with merger provision: It safeguards the members of a political party where the original party merges with another party subject to the condition that at least two-thirds of the members have agreed to such merger. The exception is based on the number of members rather than the reason behind the defection.
Power to the presiding officer: The presiding officer has been given wide and absolute powers to decide the case related to disqualification of the members on the grounds of defection.
Unable to curb instability: With not enough room for elected representatives to harbour a difference of opinion, en-masse departures of rebelling legislators have become the ‘political’ normal. Along with uprooting incumbent governments, such departures can also bring governance to a grinding halt.
Expulsion does not attract disqualification: The law focuses on voluntary defection and remains silent about expulsion of a member from the party. Once expelled, such a member would then be an independent in the House, with an option of joining another party, which presents a possible loophole for exploitation of the Schedule.
(The author is a trainer for Civil Services aspirants.)