A Judicial Nudge Following Stuck Legislative Business

Context

  • The Supreme Court of India heard arguments on the Presidential Reference regarding the Governor’s powers under Article 200 relating to assent to Bills passed by State legislatures.
  • Earlier, in J.B. Pardiwala case, a 3-month timeline was fixed for Governors to decide on Bills. The same applies to the President.
Key Issue
  • Article 200 of the Constitution provides four options to a Governor when presented with a Bill:
    1. Give assent.
    2. Withhold assent.
    3. Return the Bill (if not a Money Bill) for reconsideration.
    4. Reserve the Bill for the President’s consideration.
  • The controversy: Does the Governor have discretion in exercising these options, or must he act only on the aid and advice of the Council of Ministers under Article 163?
Judicial Principles
  • Shamsher Singh v. State of Punjab (1974): Governor cannot act independently; must act on advice of the Council of Ministers.
  • Nabam Rebia (2016): Reaffirmed that Governor is bound by ministerial advice in executive functions.
  • Shamsher Singh & Nabam Rebia → Both highlight Governor’s limited discretion.
The Court’s Move
  • Supreme Court fixed a 3-month time limit for the Governor/President to act on a Bill.
  • The rationale: Long delays by Governors created a constitutional deadlock and undermined legislative supremacy.
Issue of ‘Discretion’
  • The question: Can the Governor indefinitely withhold assent?
  • Punchhi Commission & Sarkaria Commission → Governors must act as constitutional heads, not political actors.
  • SC judgments like The State of Tamil Nadu v. The Governor of Tamil Nadu (2025) raised concerns about “sitting over” Bills, calling it unconstitutional.
Constitutional Significance
  • Article 200 vs Article 201: Both do not prescribe a strict time limit, but SC interpreted constitutional silence to avoid abuse of power.
  • Doctrine of Constitutional Morality invoked – authorities must uphold legislative intent, not stall it.
Why It Matters?
  • Ensures legislative supremacy in a parliamentary democracy.
  • Prevents Governors from stalling elected governments’ agendas.
  • Strengthens cooperative federalism by curbing misuse of Governor’s office.
Way Forward
  • Clearer constitutional or legislative amendment may be needed to codify timelines for assent.
  • Governors must act as constitutional figureheads and not political agents.
  • Judicial interventions should be exceptional, ensuring balance of power.
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