GS2 – Polity
Context
- The issue of Governor’s role in granting assent to State Bills has become a recurring constitutional controversy.
- Several States (Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Telangana, Punjab) have accused their Governors of deliberately delaying assent or reserving Bills indefinitely for the President.
- The Supreme Court (2023–25) has repeatedly intervened, reminding Governors that they are bound by the Constitution and cannot “sit on Bills indefinitely.”
Constitutional Provisions
Article 200 – Assent to Bills
When a Bill passed by a State Legislature is presented to the Governor, the Governor has four options:
- Assent → The Bill becomes law.
- Withhold Assent → Effectively vetoes the Bill (rare in practice, often controversial).
- Return the Bill (if not a Money Bill) → The Legislature may reconsider. If re-passed, the Governor is constitutionally bound to give assent.
- Reserve the Bill for the President’s consideration →
- Mandatory in some cases, e.g., Bills derogating High Court powers.
- Discretionary in other politically sensitive cases.
Implication: Governor is expected to act as a constitutional link between State and Union, not as a political veto point.
Article 201 – Bills Reserved for the President
- When a Bill is reserved, the President may:
- Give assent → Bill becomes law.
- Withhold assent → Bill fails.
- Return the Bill (if not a Money Bill) → Legislature may reconsider and re-pass, but again the President is not bound to assent.
Key Issue:
- The Constitution does not specify a time frame for the President to decide, leading to prolonged delays (sometimes years).
- This creates legislative deadlock in States, undermining the principle of representative government.
Issues Highlighted in Current Affairs
- a) Delays in Governor’s Action
- Example: The Tamil Nadu NEET exemption Bill (2021) was kept pending by the Governor for over a year before being forwarded to the President.
- Example: In Kerala, Governor Arif Mohammad Khan reserved multiple University-related Bills, leading to legal battles.
- b) Partisan Reservations
- Critics argue Governors use reservation powers selectively, aligning with Union Government interests.
- c) Lack of Timelines
- Unlike the President (bound by Article 74 to act on Cabinet advice), Governors are not explicitly time-bound under Article 200.
- This ambiguity creates scope for misuse.
- d) Judicial Interventions
- Shamsher Singh vs State of Punjab (1974): Governor must act on aid and advice of Council of Ministers.
- Keisham Meghachandra Singh vs Manipur (2020): SC said Governors cannot indefinitely delay decisions.
- SC hearings (2023–25): Strongly reminded Governors that “inaction is unconstitutional.”
Significance
- Federalism → Misuse of Articles 200–201 undermines cooperative federalism by allowing unelected Governors to stall elected governments.
- Democratic Mandate → Delays in assent negate the authority of legislatures chosen by the people.
- Separation of Powers → Creates tension between Union executive and State legislatures.
- Judicial Safeguards → Courts may step in to issue guidelines, but risk being drawn into political disputes.
Reform Proposals
- Time Frame for Assent → Introduce constitutional or statutory limits (e.g., 3 months) for Governors/President to act.
- Clarity on Reservation → Restrict discretionary reservation to exceptional cases.
- Strengthen Federal Spirit → Governors should act as neutral constitutional heads, not political appointees.
- SC Guidelines → Judicially enforceable directions to prevent indefinite stalling.