Title: Draft Constitution (Contd.) Article 289 -
(Contd.)
Volume: Volume VIII (16th May to 16th June 1949)
Date: 16/06/1949
Participants: The Chairman (Dr.
Rajendra Prasad), Shri Jaspat Roy Kapoor, Sardar
Hukum Singh, Smt. Annie Mascarene, Mr. H. V. Kamath, The Chairman (Dr.
Rajendra Prasad)
Constituent
Assembly OF INDIA Debates (Proceedings) - Volume VIII
Thursday, the 16th June 1949
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The Constituent Assembly of India met in the Constitution Hall, New Delhi, at
Eight of the Clock, Mr. President (The Honourable Dr. Rajendra Prasad) in the
Chair.
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TAKING THE PLEDGE AND SIGNING THE
REGISTER
The following Members took the pledge and signed the Register:-
(1)
Sheikh Mohd. Abdullah.
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[Kashmir]
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(2)
Mirza Mohd. Afzal Beg.
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(3)
Maulana Mohd. Syeed Masoodi.
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(4)
Shri Moti Ram Bagda.
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Mr.
President : I am sure the House will join me in extending a
cordial welcome to Sheikh Mohd. Abdullah and the three other Members, Who have
joined the Assembly today and are going to take their seats for the first time.
This brings to the Assembly now the full complement of representative from all
State that have acceded to India.
Shri H. V. Kamath (C. P. & Berar : General) : Bhopal and Hyderabad?
Mr. President : Their presence, I am sure is going to be of great help in
framing the Constitution which is intended to cover the whole country and
which, I am sure, will receive full support from all its constituent members.
They have been somewhat late in coming, but it is not their fault, nor do I
think it is our fault. Circumstances have been such that they have been
delayed, but I am sure they have come in time to make very useful contributions
to our Constitution.
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DRAFT CONSTITUTION-Contd.
Article 289
Mr. President : We shall now proceed with the discussion of article 289.
Mr. Pataskar.
Shri
H. V. Pataskar (Bombay : General) : Sir, I am now going to look at
this question from a constitutional point of view. So far as I am aware there
is no other Constitution where such elaborate provision with respect to the
elections and its details are made. Even the Canadian Election Act on the basis
of which the present amendment and the subsequent amendments which are to
follow are drafted, is an Act of the Canadian Legislature, and that too, as I
said yesterday, as far as I can find out from the records available to me,
applicable only to the Dominion Parliament in Canada. In spite of all efforts,
I could not get a copy of it either in the Legislative Library or this library.
All the same, from the documents available, I am convinced. My point is whether
really it is necessary or desirable that all these elaborate details about the
method of election, about the Election Commission, etc., are necessary to be
included in the Constitution. While, as we could find, there is some
justification probably from what must have come to the notice of the Drafting
Committee and in view of the work which is now proceeding for the preparation
for the elections, that they want some provision of this kind to be made, the
best remedy would be not to include them in the Constitution here, but to get
an Act passed by the legislative section of the Constituent Assembly. I am told
it is likely to meet in September next and it would not have mattered if an Act
on the lines of the Canadian Election Act was passed by the Central
Legislature. It is not desirable that it should be provided for in the
Constitution which is for all time to come. We do not know what conditions may
prevail after ten or twenty years. From what is happening in some parts of the
country, it is not desirable that our constitution should be burdened
with all these details. I would therefore still appeal-probably it may be
without much effect-that all these thing and the subsequent provisions which
are to follow could have more appropriately found a place in the Act to be
passed by the Central Legislature. We have our own legislature even now and
that could have been used.
Sir, I do not think it is desirable in matters of such consequence we should
try to depart from time to time from what we decided earlier, unless there were
some very cogent reasons as to why that decision should be reversed after a few
months’ time. As I said, so far as I can see, article 289 (2) is
quite enough for the purpose. Even under article 289 (2) we can appoint not merely
some official of the Government as Election Commissioners, but people of the
position of High Court Judges; we can make them permanent; we can make them as
independent as we are trying to make them permanent; we can make them as
independent as we are trying to make them in the case of the Central
Commission. Even under the Government of India Act, 1935, which certainly did
not contemplate so much of a Federal Government as a type of Government which
was to some extent more unitary than otherwise, provision for election was
contained in section 291. It says: “In so far as provision with respect to the
matters hereinafter mentioned is not made by this act, His Majesty in Council
may from time to time make provision with respect to those matters or any of
them.........the conduct of elections under this Act and the methods of voting
thereat etc. “ Even then, practically it was left to the provincial
Governments. I do not see any reason why we should make provision for all these
thing in the constitution itself and as far as I have been able to ascertain,
no other constitution contains a provision of this nature.
I have therefore to make one or two concrete suggestions. We may keep article
289 as it is. We may supplement it by an Act of the Central Legislature for
making provision with respect to all other matters which are now tried to put
in this Constitution, as to what should be the status of these Regional and
other Commissioners when they are appointed, whether they should be independent
men of the position of High Court Judges, how they should be removed and all
these things. I agree that they should be free from influence of the executive.
All that we can easily entrust at least to the present Central Legislature.
Finally, I have to make an appeal that it is not yet too late in the day when
we should really seriously consider whether article 289 (2) is not enough. As I
have already stated, the amendment takes away to my mind not only the last
vestige of provincial autonomy, but actually displays a distrust of our people
in provinces, down from the Governor nominated by the President to the smallest
local authority. I do not think there is any justification for an attitude of
this type. Therefore, I suggest that we should not try to incorporate all these
things in the Constitution itself.
Shri
R. K. Sidhva (C. P. & Berar : General) : Mr. President, Sir, I
consider this article in the Constitution as one of the important articles as
far as elections are concerned. I do not think that there are two opinions
either in this House or outside the House that elections should be fair, pure,
honest and impartial. If that is the view, I am sure it could be achieved only
by an impartial agency as has been contemplated in this article. We want the
elections to above-board. Any machinery that is to be set up should be quite
independent, free from any influence from any agency, executive or anybody.
Therefore, Sir, I whole-heartedly welcome the article that has been proposed by
my honourable Fiend Dr. Ambedkar.
Sir, I do feel that even this article does not go as far as is necessary in the
matter of perfection of elections is concerned. I will show you presently that
there is some defect in this article also. With all that, I feel that every
effort has been made in this article to achieve the object which we all are
anxious to achieve.
It has been stated, why do you encroach upon the rights of the provinces by
entrusting this work to a Special Commission? Now, Sir, I fail to understand
how the question of encroaching upon the right of the provinces arises at all.
This Commission will not run the elections for the provincial legislatures
only, but it will run the elections for the elections for the provincial
legislatures only, but it will run the elections for the Central Legislature
also. If, it encroaches on the rights of the provinces, it encroaches on the
rights of the centre also, and therefore it is unfair to say that it encroaches
upon the rights of the provinces.
Under this article, a machinery has been set up for the election purposes.
While it has been made independent of the executive for purposes of
administration, clause (5) says that the staff required for election work may
be borrowed from provinces. Herein lies the defect, which I said makes the
scheme imperfect. If you want to make the scheme perfect, you should not borrow
any staff from the provinces. Though during the period of election, the staff
would be under control of the Commission, It will be only for a temporary
period. They will be permanent people responsible to the executive and if the
executive wants to play mischief, it can issue secret instructions to that
staff to act according to their behests. The staff may feel that their
permanent duty lay with the executive, that the work with the Commission was
for a short period and they would thus carry out the fiat or behest of the
permanent officials. Therefore, Sir, I would have preferred all the staff to be
also recruited from outside but I considered myself as to what will be the
effect of it. It will require an army of men. Those persons who have seen the
elections being run and those who are interested in it know that do run the
elections of the whole country they will have to recruit a number of men, a
large army of men. It will be very expensive; therefore, although to that
extent it is imperfect, I accept it for the reason that it is nearer to
perfection. If we have to recruit a new staff it will be prohibitive as far as
expenditure is concerned and it will be a new untrained staff and probably it
will not be administratively as effective as we would expect it to be. Another
provision is as regards the permanency of the Commission. It has been suggested
why you incur so much expenditure in providing for a permanent Commissions. I
have some experience of elections of the Karachi Municipal corporation both as
the Mayor and Chairman of the Standing Committee. There is a provision in
Karachi Municipal Act that there shall be a permanent staff and in accordance
with that since ten years we have introduced this permanently and the elections
have been fair and perfect although compared with Karachi the number of voters
there being negligible but the impersonation and the false votes have been
completely removed by that method which we have introduced. I am positive that
with the permanent Commission that we are going to establish, we are going to
remove all these defects and it is incorrect to state that this Commission will
not have any work after the general election is over. We shall have now about
4,000 members in all the provinces and there will be bye-elections. Surely
every month there will be two or three elections-some will die, some will be
promoted to high offices-some will go here and there. In this Constituent
Assembly during the short period we have had a number of bye-elections although
we had nothing to do with them, but in the places from which they have come
there have been a number of elections. There for, apart from the necessity and
fairness, this Commission will have ample work. Apart from that if the
Commission is permanent, what will it do? Periodically it will examine the
electoral rolls and from the statistics of those provinces those who are dead
they will remove those names and will bring the electoral rolls up to date as
far as possible. An electoral rolls are prepared, 50 per cent. of them are
defective. Some are dead and their names are intentionally put in by a
particular party who wants to run the elections and wants to put in names of
their own choice; I have heard people living in the cities trying to influence
by mixing up with the executive. I can tell you that from my own personal
experience and I feel that if we were to have a perfect electoral roll- and
electoral roll is the principal thing in an election-I am sire we must have an
independent Commission and if we establish a Permanent Commission we shall
certainly have a permanent roll and a very good electoral roll. I have no doubt
in my mind about that and therefore though you say that it will be an expensive
thing and it is not a necessity, I strongly say from my experience that
this Commission is very necessary under the circumstances that I have
mentioned.
Now coming to the tribunal, it will be necessary for the election petitions or
those who have to make any application for the election, to have a Tribunal. I
have also certain experience of tribunals. Tribunals have been appointed by the
Governors in the past and they have appointed tribunals, at the instance of the
Executive, of the favourites and they have never acted impartially. I therefore
suggest that the tribunal should consist of judges of superior courts to whom
the election petitions of the election should go. I am opposed to such cases
being entrusted to any kind of tribunals. It will mar the very purpose and the
very object for which we are striving-to have our elections pure and fair-it
will frustrate that very object, if in the tribunal that will be appointed,
some kind of mischief is made. In England also-I might state- the
Constitutional law of the British Commonwealth provides for entrusting this
work to superior courts. I therefore suggest that although nothing could be
provided in this Constitution, I do not desire that the Constitution should be
burdened with all this-but in the Act that will be made-the Election
Act-wherein many things are required to be put, e.g., the secret ballot boxes
etc.-I suggest to Dr. Ambedkar to bear that in mind that when the Parliament Act
is made it must be made cleat that the tribunal’s appointment should not be
left to the President or anybody-I do not want hereafter any kind of trickery
that was played in the past should be played hereafter. With all that, I feel
that the permanent superior judiciary alone can fairly and impartially
adjudicate in such disputes and they will command the confidence of the public.
Those who will be appointed from the public men or some lawyers may be best
lawyers but they will be temporary men and would be liable to influence. If the
tribunal does not consist of responsible permanent men I am sure these tribunal
will be of no effect. My Friend Mr. Pataskar desired tat why burden the
Constitution with scheme, the rules may be made; but I can surely and safely
tell him that if we have not such an article in our Constitution our very
purpose of making our elections pure will be frustrated; it is, therefore,
necessary that it should be provided here. I do not want this to go into the
Election Act. I really wish even some of the other provisions e.g. the secret
ballot-box could also be provided in the Constitution which is very essential
for an election. The whole thing depends upon the election for the future
constituencies and if we do not make this provision in the Constitution and
leave it to Parliament to be made, it will be running a great risk. Under these
circumstances I whole-heartedly welcome this article and strongly support it.
Shri
Kuladhar Chaliha (Assam: General) : Mr. President, I have heard with
great attention the arguments advanced by Dr. Ambedkar who is the
Constitutional maneuver and whose industry and diligence is a wonder to all of
us. Yet, his arguments have not brought that conviction which ordinarily they
bring. His main objection is-he first argued that he wanted it to be inserted
in the Fundamental Rights but as it was said that he wanted separate provision
for this, so this article has been added in order to safeguard the interest of
the electorate-he thought that a body outside the Executive should be there to
conduct the elections; but what is that body outside the Executive? It is the
President who will select the Chief Election Commissioner and he is a party-man
whatever it may be and will have the same prejudices and same bias towards his
own party-man as anyone else and therefore that argument does not hold very good.
Secondly, he says and he admits that it is a radical change I do not see any
reason why this radical change is brought forward. Has he been able to give us
examples of corruption and nepotism in case of election tribunals in the
provinces? No instance has been given of abuse of power by the election
tribunals appointed by the Governors in the provinces. In spite of that he
wants a radical change. Of course radical illness requires a radical remedy,
but Dr. Ambedkar has not been able to give one single instance of corruption or
abuse or powers by these election tribunals. On the contrary we know that, as a
result of the findings of an election tribunal in Sing, Pir Ilahi Bux was
removed by his own party men, which shows that our people have the capacity to
be impartial. I see no reason why this radical change should be necessary.
Then it said that there are minorities in the provinces who require protection.
But should we keep them in haughty isolation and not pave the way for
harmonious relations with the general population? By doing this you will be
creating big problems for these provinces. It is said that they are racially
and linguistically different. But will you prepetuate these differences or
should you try to remove them? I submit that no justification has been offered
for this radical change. Dr. Ambedkar has brought this forward on the analogy
of the Canadian Act of 1920. But there they have a small population as against
our 340 millions, and one Election Commission would hardly do for this country.
In spite of there being Regional Commissioners this Election Commission would
not be able to realise the feelings of the people of different parts of the
country. They would not know what a man in Madras would do and what a man in
Assam would do. I submit that this thing should not be taken out of the
provinces. If you suspect the provinces and take greater power for the centre
it will only lead to undesirable results. If you cannot trust men like Messrs.
Pant, Kher and Shukla and the men working under them you will hardly make a
success of democracy. You are doing something which will have a disintegrating
effect and will accentuate differences instead of solving them. If you take too
much power for the Centre the provinces will try to break away from you. How
can a man in Madras understand the feelings the sentiments of a man in Assam or
Bengal? You seem to think that all the best qualities are possessed by people
here in the Centre. But the provinces charge you with taking too much power and
reducing them to a municipal body without any initiative left in them. You
think you posses better qualities than the men in the provinces, but I know
there are people there who are much better than you are. If you cannot trust
the honesty of your own individuals you can never make a success of democracy.
You are always suspicious and think that the provinces will be unjust to the
minorities. But if they are kept aloof and always under the protection of the
President or the central executive, they will never be able to develop their
own virtues, and you will only be encouraging disturbance and rebellions. It
has been suggested that the Scheduled class people are suspicious about the
impartiality of the provinces. But they are our own people and they can be just
as fair and impartial as men in the Centre. Why should you think that you have
developed the virtue of impartiality which no one else possesses? Sir, I fail
to see why this provision should be sought to be embodied in the Constitution.
Sir, the Governor is appointed by the Centre and he will form election
tribunals, as has been done in the past. In spite of Mr. Sidhva’s assertion I
must say that no case of partiality has been proved against any of these
tribunals. In a case in which I was interested I know that even when the
Congress was in the bad books of Government, the tribunal decided in favour of
the Congress, although the candidate was opposed by Rai Bahadurs and other big
men. That shows that they can be impartial. Why should you condemn you own men
as partial, unjust and incapable of being honest? If we cannot trust our own
people we are not worthy of our independence, Sir, an injustice is sought to be
done to the provinces and they are needlessly suspected, and I therefore oppose
this proposal.
Pandit
Hirday Nath Kunzru (United Provinces: General) : Sir, my honourable
Friend Dr. Ambedkar moved a new article yesterday in place of article 289 as
contained in the Draft Constitution. The article deals with a very important
matter and departs radically from the corresponding article in the important
matter and departs radically from the corresponding article in the Draft
Constitution. Nevertheless he contented himself with moving his amendment
without explaining in the smallest measures the reasons why the new Draft had
been proposed. When I pointed out it was not fair to the House that an article
dealing with a very important matter should be placed before the House without
a full explanation of its provisions he felt the need for defending himself.
But finding that he was in a very difficult position he became reckless and
said I had asked for an explanation only because I had not read the amendment.
It was obvious that this irresponsible statement of his did not satisfy the
House and he was therefore compelled to explain the differences between the new
Draft and the old Draft.
Sir, several points arise in connection with this question. The most important
question is one of principle. Is it right that in a matter of this kind the
provincial Governments which are being given full responsible government should
be deprived of all power? I shall not dilate on this subject because it has
been dealt with very ably and fully by our honourable Friend Mr. Pataskar. Dr. Ambedkar
defended the new procedure which makes the Central Government responsible for
superintendence, control and guidance in all matters relating to the
preparation of the electoral rolls and the conduct of the elections on the
ground that complaints had been received from some provinces that members
belonging to racial, linguistic, or cultural minorities were being excluded,
under ministerial instructions from the lists of voters. I do not know to what
extent the complaints received by him or by the Government of India have been
investigated and found to be correct. Supposing that they have been found to be
correct, one has to ask oneself why this elaborate Constitution is being
framed. If we cannot expect common honesty from persons occupying the highest
positions in the discharge if their duties, the foundation for responsible
government is wanting, and the outlook for the future is indeed gloomy. I do
not know of any federal Constitution in which the Centre is charged with the
duty of getting the electoral rolls prepared and the elections held fairly and
without prejudice to any minority-there may be some constitution in which such
a provision exists, but I am not aware of it. In all the Probability ours will
be only federal or quasi-federal constitution in which the provinces will be
excluded from all share in the preparation of the electoral rolls and other
ancillary matters except in the preparation of the electoral rolls and other
ancillary matters except in so far as their help is needed by the Election
Commissioners appointed by the President.
Even granting however, Sir, that there is need for taking the control of
elections out of the hands of the provincial Governments we have to see whether
the new Draft contains the necessary safeguards. It may be right to curtail the
political power of the Provinces; but is there no danger, if the article is
left as it is, that the political prejudice of the Central Government may
prevail where otherwise the political prejudices of the provincial Government
might have prevailed? Everything in the new Draft is left to the President; the
appointment of the Election Commission will be made by the President; he will
appoint the Chief Election Commissioner and decide how many Election
Commissioners should be appointed; he will decide the conditions of service and
tenure of office of the Election Commissioners and the Regional Commissioners
that might have to be appointed. Again, while it is provided that the Chief
Election Commissioner should not be removed except in the same manner as a
Judge of the Supreme Court, the removal of the other Election Commissioners is
left in the hands of the President. He can remove any Commissioner he likes in
consultation with the Chief Election Commissioner. Clause (4) of the article
which deals with this matter is so important that I think it is desirable that
I should read it out to the House. It says.
“The conditions of service and tenure of office of the Election Commissioners
and the Regional Commissioners shall be such as the President may by rule
determine :
Provided
that the Chief Election Commissioner shall not be removed from office except in
like manner and on the like grounds as a judge of the Supreme Court and the
conditions of service of the Chief Election Commissioner shall not be varied to
his disadvantage after his appointment.
Provided
further that any other Election Commissioner or a Regional Commissioner shall
not be removed from office except on the recommendation of the Chief Election
Commissioner. “
I find, Sir, that I made a mistake when I said that the other Election
Commissioners and the Regional Commissioners could be removed in consultation
with the Chief Election Commissioner. They can be removed only on the
recommendation of the Chief Election Commissioner. Here two things are
noticeable: the first is that it is only the Chief Election Commissioner that
can feel that he can discharge his duties without the slightest fear of
incurring the displeasure of the executive, and the second is that the removal
of the other Election Commissioners will depend on the recommendations of one
man only, namely the Chief Election Commissioner. However responsible he may
be, it seems to me very undesirable that the removal of his colleagues who will
occupy positions as responsible as those of judges of the Supreme Court should
depend on the opinion of the man. We are anxious, Sir, that the preparation of the
electoral rolls and the conduct of elections should be entrusted to people who
are free from political bias and whose impartially can be relied upon in all
circumstances. But, by leaving a great deal of power in the hands of the
President we have given room for the exercise of political influence in the
appointment of the Chief Election Commissioner and the other Election
Commissioners and officers by the Central Government. The Chief Election
Commissioners will have to be appointed on the advice of the Prime Minister,
and, if the Prime Minister suggests the appointment of a party-man the
President will have no option but to accept the Prime Minister’s nominee,
however unsuitable he may be on public grounds. (Interruption) .
Somebody asked me why it should be so. As full responsible Government will
prevail at the Centre, the President cannot be expected to act in any matter at
his discretion. He can only act on the advice of the Ministry and, when, in
matters of patronage, he receives the recommendations of the Prime Minister, he
cannot, if he wants to act as a constitutional Head of the Republic, refuse to
accept them. I think, Sir, therefore, that the Draft placed before us by Dr. Ambedkar
has to be modified in several respects, so that the Election Commissioners may
in reality, consist of impartial persons and the Election Commissioners may be
able to discharge their responsible duties fearlessly.
My remedy for the defects that I have pointed out is that Parliament should be authorised
to make provision for these matters by law. Again, Sir, this article does not
lay down the qualifications of persons who are chosen as Chief Election
Commissioners or as Election Commissioners. And, as I have already pointed out,
in the matter of removal, the Election Commissioners are not on the same
footing as the Chief Election Commissioner. I feel, Sir, that the opinion that
I have places before the House, was at one time or other the opinion of Dr. Ambedkar
too. We have in the List of Amendments, amendment No. 103 which has not been
moved by Dr. Ambedkar, but has been given notice of by him. Honourable Members
who have read this amendment will have noticed that clause (2) provides that a ‘member
of the Commission shall only be removed from office in like manner and on the
like grounds as a judge of the Supreme Court, and the conditions of service of
a member of the Commission shall not be varied to his disadvantage after his
appointment’. It will be clear therefore that the suggestion that I have made
is in accord with the better judgment of Dr. Ambedkar which, unfortunately, has
not been allowed to prevail.
I know, Sir, that Dr. Ambedkar told us yesterday that it might be unnecessary
to have permanent Election Commissioners and that all that might be required
might be to appoint Election Commissioners when there is work enough for them
to do. In such case obviously the procedure relating to the removal of judges
of the Supreme Court cannot be applied in the case of Election Commissioners.
This is true, but then there is no reason why the whole matter should be left
in the hands of the President, and why the conditions and tenure of service of
the Election Commissioners should be determined by rule by him. These, too,
should be determined by law made by Parliament.
Again, Sir, we have to consider the position of Regional Commissioners who may
have to be appointed in the provinces in order to help the Election Commission
in carrying out its duties honestly and efficiently. It is obvious that so long
as these officers are holding their offices they will be carrying out highly
responsible duties. It will depend on them primarily whether the preparation of
the electoral rolls and all matters connected with the conduct of the elections
gives satisfaction to the public or not. Now, in the Draft which was not placed
by him before the House Dr. Ambedkar provided with regard to the Regional
Commissioners and the Returning Officers, etc., that no such authority or officer
would be removed except by order of the President. As I have already pointed
out a change has been made now and their removal has been made to depend on the
recommendation of the Chief Election Commissioner. This has been done
presumably because the Election Commissioners would be permanent officers and
if there is only one permanent officer, the law cannot obviously require that
the removal of the Regional Commissioners and the Returning Officers should
depend on the decision of the Commissioners, as a whole. But for this very
reason, Sir, the matter ought not to be left to the sweet will of the
President, in reality the Prime Minister of the day, but should be determined
by law.
My honourable Friend, Professor Shibban Lal Saksena, moved a number of amendment
yesterday, Sir, with regard to the new Draft placed before the House by Dr. Ambedkar.
It may not be practicable to accept some of them, but I think that he has done
a public service by drawing the attention of the House to the glaring defects in
the Draft that we are considering. I think it is the duty of my honourable
friend, Dr. Ambedkar, to consider the matter carefully and to provide such
safeguards as will give general satisfaction by ensuring that our electoral
machinery will be free not merely from provincial political influences but also
from Central political influences. We are going in for democracy based on adult
franchise. It is necessary therefore that every possible step should be taken
to ensure the fair working of the electoral machinery. If the electoral
machinery is defective or is not efficient or is worked by people whose
integrity cannot be depended upon, democracy will be poisoned at the source;
nay, people, instead of learning from elections how they should exercise their,
vote how by a judicious use of their vote they can bring about changes in the
Constitution and reforms in the administration, will learn only how parties
based on intrigues can be formed and what unfair methods they can adopt to
secure what they want.
Mr. President : I think that Members understand that we will have to finish
the agenda today. Otherwise we may have to sit tomorrow.
Mr. Naziruddin Ahmad (West Bengal: Muslim) : Mr. President, Sir, I have
come here to support this article. At the beginning when I came to this
Assembly for the first time, I thought that the Provinces should be made strong
and the Centre to that extent must yield. But after a considerable amount of
experience and on prolonged consideration of what is happening in the Provinces
and in the State, I am now of the opinion that for many years to come the
Centre must take charge of all important matters affecting the general
well-being of the country and encroach on the Provincial field. Election is a
most important item in a democratic set up and it is very necessary that it
should be controlled and supervised by a very competent, independent and
impartial body. The way in which some of the Provinces are proceeding shows
that the Provinces are rent by party factions and it will always be the desire
of the party, or the faction in power for the time being, to appoint election
tribunals and officers of their own choice with a view to control or manipulate
the elections. The result will be that election tribunals and officers will not
be free from corruption and partiality. It is for this reason that I welcome
the move by the Centre to control elections, so that thereby the impartiality
and efficiency of the election machine could be ensured. We have had the
experience of West Bengal and other Provinces. West Bengal is rent by party
faction. Even in the Congress ranks in Calcutta and in the districts there are
several groups and factions accusing one another of habitual corruption and the
like. They are fighting against one another in a most unseemly fashion to the
detriment of the general well-being of the country. This is also happening in
some of the State. We have the unseemly quarrel in the Greater Rajasthan State
and also in some other States. If we do not want the Provinces and the States
to descend into chaos and disorder, the first thing that we should do is to
control the election, not to interfere with the policies and activities of the
different parties, but just to ensure impartiality and efficiency in the
conduct of elections. The most important duty of the Commission would be to
appoint Election officers upon whose efficiency, integrity and independence
much will depend, and I believe that the Central control of the these elections
will be welcome in serious quarters. The secrecy of the ballot box, as has been
pointed out by one of the speakers and is well-known, is a very important
matter in an election as fostering freedom of the vote, and this secrecy must
be thoroughly and effectively guarded. We hear allegations and counter
allegations that in the recent South-Calcutta election, the secrecy of the
ballot box and the integrity of the ballot papers were violated. I do not know
what truth there may be in these allegations, but they have a had odour in
themselves. I believe that if these matters are controlled by the Centre, these
tendencies to make allegations and counter-allegations of this type would be
removed. The officers who are to be appointed to conduct these elections should
be above all suspicion and should be selected just to avoid provincial cliques
and parties. Sir, I do not wish to take up further time of the House. I accord
my humble and whole-hearted support to this article.
Shri
K. M. Munshi (Bombay : General) : Mr. President, Sir, I rise to
support the amendment No. 99 moved by my honourable Friend, Dr. Ambedkar. This
amendment has been subjected to two files, one by my honourable Friend, Pandit Kunzru,
on the ground that the amendment does not go far enough, that it does not make
the Election Commission sufficiently independent, that the Central Government
could influence it in a manner prejudicial to fair elections. That is one
ground. The other ground, of which the exponents have been my honourable Friend
Mr. Pataskar and Kuladhar Chaliha from Assam, put forward, is that this is a
trespass on trespass on provincial autonomy, to put it shortly. I will deal
with these two points separately.
Sir, the amendment which has finally emerged from the Drafting Committee makers
it clear that neither the Central Government nor the provincial Governments
will have anything to do with the election. The Chief Election Commissioner, as
the House will find, is practically independent. No doubt he is appointed by
the President, that is, the Central Government. There can be no other
authority, no higher authority in India than the President for appointing this
Tribunal. you cannot omit this important thing.
The next argument against the amendment is that this amendment departs from the
old amendment No. 103 which was to be moved on behalf of the Drafting
Committee, under which the Commissioners other than the Chief Election
commissioners were not removable except in the manner in which a High Court
Judge can be removed. Perfectly right. But the change has been made for a very
good reason. Between two election, normally there would be a period of five
years. We cannot have an Election Commission sitting all the time during those
five years doing nothing. The Chief Election Commissioner will continue to be a
whole-time officer performing the duties of his office and looking after the
work from day to day, but when major elections take place in the country,
either Provincial or Central, the Commission must be enlarged to cope with the
work. More members therefore have to be added to the Commission. They are no
doubt to be appointed by the President, but as the House will find, they are to
be appointed from time to time. Once they are appointed for a particular period
they are not removable at the will of the President. Therefore, to that extent
their independence is ensured. So there is no reason to believe that these
temporary Election Commissioners will not have the necessary measure of
independence. Any way the Chief Election Commissioner an independent officer, will
be the Chairman and being a permanent officer will have naturally directing and
supervising power over the whole Commission. Therefore, it is not correct to
say that independence of the Commission is taken away to any extent.
We must remember one thing, that after all an election department is not like a
judiciary, a quasi-independent organ of Government. It is the duty and the
function of the Government of the day to hold the elections. The huge
electorates which we are putting up now, the voting list which will run into
several crores-all these must necessarily require a large army of election
officers, of clerks, of persons to control the booths and all the rest of them.
Now all this army cannot be set up as a machinery independent of Government. It
can only be provided by the Central Government, by the Provincial Government or
by the local authorities as now. It is not possible nor advisable to have a
kingdom within a kingdom, so that the election matters could be left to an
entirely independent organ of the Government. A machinery, so independent,
cannot be allowed to sit as a kind of Super-Government to decide which
Government shall come into power. There will be great political danger if the
Election Tribunal becomes such a political power in the country. Not only it
should preserve its independence, but it must retain impartiality. Therefore,
the Election Commission must remain to a large extent an ally of the
Government; not only that, but it must, to a considerable extent, be subsidiary
to Government except in regard to the discharge of the functions allotted to it
by law.
Some reference has been made that the powers of the Parliament have not been
preserved. I may point out that amendment No. 123 which is also going to be
moved by Dr. Ambedkar gives to the Parliament power to make provisions with
respect to elections to legislatures, subject, of course to the Provisions of
this Constitution. Similarly Sir, you find amendment No. 128 which gives to a
State Legislature the power to make provisions with respect to elections to
such Legislatures. Therefore, the Parliament as well as the State Legislatures
are free to make all provisions with regard to election, subject, of course, to
this particular amendment, namely, the superintendence, direction and control
of the Election Tribunal. Today, for instance, the elections are controlled by
officers appointed either by the Center or the Provinces as the case may be.
What is now intended is that they should not be subjected to the day-to-day influence
of the Government nor should they be completely independent of Government, and
therefore a sort of compromise has been made between the two positions; but I
agree with my honourable Friend, Pandit Kunzru that for the sake of clarity, at
any rate, to allay any doubts clause (2) requires a little amendment. At the
beginning of clause (2) the following words may be added; “ subject to the
provisions of law made in this behalf by Parliament. “ Similarly in clause (4)
also where the conditions of service and tenure of office of the Election
Commissioners and Regional Commissioners are prescribed, it will be proper to
have words to this effect; “ subject to the provisions made by Parliament in
that behalf. “ That, of course, would follow from amendment No. 123, but we do
not want any doubt to be on this point, and therefore, it would be better if
these words are added to give Parliamentary control over the terms of service
and the tenure.
Shri H. V. Kamath : How will you insert those words in the amendment?
Shri K. M. Munshi : I have no doubt in my mind that Dr. Ambedkar will
accept my suggestion and move these amendments.
The question was raised with regard to the qualification of the Regional Commissioners.
The same could easily be provided by parliamentary legislation either under
article 123 or under the new phrase with I submit should be added to clauses
(2) and (4) . So in this way the Parliament’s power over these details would be
secured. This amendment, therefore, maintains impartiality and independence of
the Election Commission so far as it is necessary in the circumstances and also
supremacy of the Parliament over the details.
Now I come to the other part of criticism. And, that is the argument that this
provision whittles down or takes away what is called provincial autonomy. This
argument has the knack of appearing again and again in respect of almost every
article, and I think it is high time that those honourable Members of the House
who put it forward reconcile themselves to the position that the House has
taken the line more suited to the country rather then the doctrinaire views of
theoretical writers on federalism. Dr. Ambedkar in the opening speech has made
it clear that the idea an Election Commission was accepted as far back as
January or February 1947, when even the question of the partition of the
country had not become a settled fact. The Fundamental Rights Committee put
forward this suggestion. It was unanimously accepted by the Advisory Committee
and again it was accepted unanimously by the House. Therefore, it must be
treated as the opinion of the House, and the country as a whole that matters of
election must be taken out of the purview of the Centre and the provinces with
a view to meet the realities of the situation. That being so, the only other
question is as to how this should be done.
With regard to the precedent, reference has already been made to section 19 of
the Dominion Elections Act of Canada. This Act lays down that for the whole of
Canada, a Chief Electoral Officer, not a Commission as we have envisaged, will
superintend, control and direct all elections. His tenure of office is exactly
the same as we have adopted here for the Chief Election Commissioner.
Another argument put forward in the course of this debate was that this is
undemocratic. I fail to understand how democracy is affected by this provision.
Let us analyse the position. This Constituent Assemble, if it lays down a
Constitution for the country, is nothing else but an instrument of the
sovereign people of India, not the different people of the provinces meeting
together in a confederation for the purpose of evolving Constitution. Let us
not forget this main fact. It is open to the House to look at the conditions in
the country, to look at the realities of the situation and to give some power
to the Centre, to give other power to the provinces, to transfer power from one
to the other. That does not take away from either the representative character
of the Constituent Assembly or the democratic power of he sovereign Indian
people. The House cannot be tied down by any theoretical considerations in this
matter. In the debate on article 226 also, I found the same kind of argument
advanced. But we must realise once for all that it is the Constituent Assembly
as the instrument of the sovereign people of India which is one unit that is
going to decide what are going to be the functions of the Centre and the
provisions in view of the actual condition that exist in this country. Now,
Sir, if that is so, the sovereign people, and the Constituent Assembly as their
agent, is bound to maintain the purity of elections in a practical manner. That
can only be done by the establishment of the machinery envisaged in this
amendment. To say that it is undemocratic is entirely baseless. If there is
going to be democracy, the sovereign people of India must be in a position to
elect their own representatives in a manner which is above suspicion, above
partiality. Corrupt practices do not necessarily apply to the candidates. There
may be corrupt practices by a government of the day. Therefore, it is necessary
that we should not consider this question from the point of view of any
theoretical provincial autonomy, a point which is being trotted out again and
again in this House.
My Honourable Friend Mr. Kuladhar Chaliha coming Assam said that this affects
the power of the provincial Governments. He further put forward the point of
view that in point of efficiency and integrity the Centre is no better then the
provinces. He said if I heard aright that the provinces were better in this
respect than the Centre. If that be so, I wish the sooner we wound up our
democratic business the better. My friend coming from Assam ought to know that
complaints after complaints have been received from Assam that ingenious
devices are found to shut out people who have settled in Assam from the
electoral rolls. The complaints may be wrong; I am not here judging them. But
the complaints are there..........
Shri Kuladhar Chaliha: I question that.
Shri K. M. Munshi : The complaints are known to every department that is
concerned with them. The fact that such complaints come is the reason why
provincial Governments cannot be trusted, in the condition in which we are, to
be as impartial in the elections as they should be.
Shri Kuladhar Chaliha : I seriously protest against this remark.
Mr. President : There is no need introduce heat in the discussion. We are
only discussing a purely constitutional question.
Shri K. M. Munshi : I am not introducing heat. My honourable Friend said
that the provinces are much superior to the Centre or this Constituent
Assembly. I reminded him that coming as a leader from Assam, it was a
surprising remark. It may come from some other province; that is a different
matter.
As my honourable Friend Mr. Sidhva said, in the past several Election Tribunals
were appointed by Governments of the provinces. They were not Congress
Governments; they were appointed by other Governments. They were appointed to
secure a particular object. As honourable Members know, one leading Member of
this House, who was the head of the Congress organisation of his province, was victimised
in the past regime and debarred from being a Member of the legislatures. It is
very easy for a Premier to manipulate an Election Tribunal and thus remove a
strong rival for five or seven years from the scene. It is therefore necessary
that these matters should be placed beyond the reach of temporary passions in
the provinces.
Sir, one thing more. We must realise-and this is general answer that I propose
to give to my honourable Friends, Mr. Pataskar and Mr. Chaliha-we can only
consider the problems before us from the conditions as they exist today. We
cannot forget the fact that some ten or eleven of the Indian States which are
not accustomed even to the little measure of democratic life which is enjoyed
by the provinces are coming into the Union on equal terms. We cannot ignore the
fact that there are corners in India where provincial autonomy requires to be
placed on a better footing. In these conditions, it is but natural, apart from
world conditions, that the Centre should have a larger measure of control over
the affairs which affect the national existence as a whole. Even in America in
which it was not a question of the Centre decentralising itself, but thirteen,
independent States coming together first in a sort of confederacy, and then in
a federation, what do we find? After the depression of 1929, agriculture,
education, industry, unemployment, insecurity, all passed gradually by various
means under the control or influence of the Centre. There, the Constitution is
water-tight and they had to go round and round in order to achieve this result.
There cannot be smaller units than a nation today; even a nation is a small
unit in the light of the international situation. This idea that provincial
autonomy is the inherent right of the Provinces, is illusory. Charles Merriam
one of the leading political thinkers in America in his book called “The Need
for Constitutional Reform”, with reference to the States of U.S.A., says, “
Most State do not now correspond to economic and social unities and their
position as units of organisation and representation may be and has been
seriously challenged.” In our country the situation is different. From the
Councils Act of 1833 till the Government of India Act of 1935, there has been
central control over the provinces and it has proved wholesome. The strength,
the power and the unity of public life which India has developed during the
last one hundred years is mainly due to centralised administration of the
country. I would warn the Members how are still harping on the same subject to
remember one supreme fact in Indian history that the glorious days of India
were only the days, whether under the Mauryas or the Moghuls, when there was a
strong central authority in the country, and the most tragic days were those
when the central authority was dismembered by the provinces trying to resist
it. We do not want to repeat that fatal mistake. We want that the provincial
sphere should be kept intact, that they should enjoy a large measure of
autonomy but only subject to national power. When national danger, comes, we
must realise that the Centre alone can step in and safeguard against the chaos
which would otherwise follow. I therefore submit that this argument about
Provincial Autonomy has no a priori theoretical validity. We have to
judge every subject or matter from the point of view of what the existing
conditions are and how best we can adjust the controls, either Central or
Provincial, to secure maximum national efficiency. From that point of view I
submit the amendment moved by my Friend Dr. Ambedkar is a good one, a very good
one and a very wholesome one for the whole country.
The Honourable Shri Satyanarayan Sinha (Bihar: General): Sir, the question
be now put.
Mr. President: There is a closure motion. I would like to take the sense of
the House.
The question is :
“That the question may now be put.”
The motion was adopted.
The
Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : (Bombay: General): Mr. President,
Sir, this amendment of mine has been subjected to criticism from various points
of view. But in my reply I do not propose to spread myself over all the points
that have been raised in the course of the debate. I propose to confine myself
to the points raised by my Friend Professor Shibban Lal Saksena and emphasized
by my Friend Pandit Hirday Nath Kunzru. According to the amendment moved by my
Friend Professor Saksena there are really two points which require our
consideration. The one point is with regard to the appointment of the
Commissioner to this Election Commission and the second relates to the removal
of the Election Commissioner. So far as the question of removal is concerned, I
personally do not think that any change is necessary in the amendment which I
have proposed, a the House will see that so far as the removal of the members
of the Election Commission is concerned the Chief Commissioner is placed on the
same footings as the Judges of the Supreme Court. And I do not know that there
exist any measure of greater security in any other constitution which is better
than the one we have provided for in the proviso at clause (4).
With regard to the other Commissioners the Provision is that, while the power
is left the President to remove them, that power is subjected to a very
important limitation, viz., than in the matter of removal of the other
Commissioners, the President can only act on the recommendation of the Chief
Election Commissioner. My contention therefore is, so far as the question of
removal is concerned, the provision which are incorporated in my amendment are
adequate and nothing more is necessary for that purpose.
Now with regard to the question of appointment I must confess that there is a
great deal of force in what my Friend Professor Saksena said that there is no use
making the tenure of the Election Commissioner a fixed and secure tenure if
there is no provision in the Constitution to prevent either a fool or a knave
or a person who is likely to be under the thumb of the Executive. My
Provision---I must admit--does not contain anything to provide against
nomination of an unfit person to the post of the Chief Election Commissioner or
the other Election Commissioner. I do want to confess that this is a very
important question and it has given me a great deal of headache and I have no
doubt about it that it is going to give this House a great deal of headache. In
the U.S.A. they have solved this question by the provision contained in article
2 Section (2) of their Constitution whereby certain appointments which are specified
in Section (2) of article 2 cannot be made by the President without the
concurrence of the Senate; so that so far as the power of appointment is
concerned, although it is vested in the President it is subject to a check by
the Senate so that the Senate may, at the time when any particular name is
proposed, make enquiries and satisfy itself that the person proposed is a
proper person. But it must also be realised that that is a very dilatory
process, a very difficult process. Parliament may not be meeting at the time
when the appointment is made and the appointment must be made at once without
waiting. Secondly, the American practice is likely and in fact does introduce
political considerations in the making of appointments. Consequently, while I
think that the provisions contained in the American Constitution is a very
salutary check upon the extravagance of the President in making his
appointments, it is likely to create administrative difficulties and I am
therefore hesitating whether I should at a later stage recommend the adoption
of the American provisions in our Constitution. The Drafting Committee had paid
considerable attention to this question because as I said it is going, to be
one of our greatest headaches and as a via media it was thought that
if this Assembly would give or enact what is called an Instrument of
Instructions to the President and provide therein some machinery which it would
be obligatory on the President to consult before making any appointment, I
think the difficulties which are felt as resulting from the American
Constitution may be obviated and the advantage which is contained therein may
be secured. At this stage it is impossible for me to see or anticipate what
attitude this House will take when the particular draft Instructions come
before the House. If the House rejects the proposal of the Drafting Committee
that there should be an Instrument of Instructions to the President which might
include, among other things, a provision with regard to the making of
appointments this problem would then be solved by that method. But, as I said,
it is quite difficult for me to anticipate what may happen. Therefore in order
to meet the criticism of my honourable Friend Professor Saksena, supported by
the criticism of my honourable Friend Pandit Kunzru, I am prepared to make
certain amendments in amendment No. 99. I am sorry I did not have time to
circulate these amendments, but when I read them the House will know what I am
proposing.
My first amendment is:
“That the words ‘to be appointed by the President’ at the end of clause (1) be
deleted.”
“In clause (2) in line 4, for the word ‘appoint’ substitute the word ‘fix’
after which insert the following:--
“The
appointment of the Chief Election Commissioner and other Election Commissioners
shall, subject to the Provisions of any law made in this behalf by Parliament,
be made by the President.’”
“The rest of the clause from the words ‘when any other Election Commissioner is
so appointed’ etc., should be numbered clause (2a).”
Shri M. Ananthasayanam Ayyangar (Madras: General): Sir, on a point of
order, new matter is being introduced which ought not to be allowed at this
stage. Otherwise there will have to be another debate.
The Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : I hope the Chair will allow other
Members to offer their views.
Mr. President: In that case I think the best course would be to postpone
consideration of this article.
The Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : There amendments are quite inoffensive;
they merely say that anything done should be subject to laws made by
Parliament.
Shri T. T. Krishnamachari (Madras : General): I suggest that these
amendments may be cyclostyled and circulated, and they may be taken up later
on.
The Honourable Shri K. Santhanam (Madras : General): I suggest that these
may be considered by the Drafting Committee. Even if they are merely technical
we must have an opportunity of considering them.
The Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : These amendments have been brought
after consultation with the Drafting Committee.
Shri T. T. Krishnamachari : The amendments merely say that the President’s
powers are subject to parliament legislation. They do not detract from the
contents of the article and we need not be too finicky about the procedure at
this stage.
Pandit Hirday Nath Kunzru : Even if there is to be further discussion, I
think we should know how Dr. Ambedkar proposes to meet the difficulties that
have been pointed out. He should therefore be allowed to put forward his
suggestions.
Mr. President : That is why I allowed him to move these amendments. After
they are moved we shall decide whether to discuss them now or at a later date.
Shri K. M. Munshi: The amendments only say that acts, done should be
subject to the laws of Parliament. That is already covered by amendment 123.
Mr. President: Let the amendments be moved.
The Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : My next amendment is:
“That in the beginning of clause (4) the following words should be inserted:-
‘subject to the provisions of any law made in this behalf by Parliament’.”
The Honourable Shri K. Santhanam : Sir, this is a material amendment
because the President’s discretion may be fettered by parliamentary law.
Mr. President: I
do not think any further discussion is necessary; let these be moved:
The Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : You cannot deal with a constitution on
technical points. To many technicalities will destroy constitution-making.
Shri H. V. Kamath : Sir, you ruled some days ago that substantial
amendments would be postponed.
Mr. President : If these are considered to be substantial amendments they
will be held over. As there seems to be a large body of opinion in the House in
favour of postponement, the discussion will be held over.
---------
New
Article 289-A
The
Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : Sir, I move:
“That with reference to amendment No. 110 of List I (Fifth Week), for the
proposed new article 289-A, the following article be substituted:-
289-A.
There shall be one general electoral roll for every territorial constituency
for election to either
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|
No
person to be ineligible for inclusion in, or to claim to be excluded from the
electoral roll on grounds of religion, race, caste or sex.
|
House
of Parliament or to the House of the Legislature of a State and no person
shall be ineligible for inclusion in, or claim to be excluded from, any such
roll on grounds only of religion race, caste, sex or any of them.”
|
Sir, the object of this is merely to give effect to the decision of the House
that there shall hereafter be no separate electorates at all. As a matter of
fact this clause in unnecessary because by later amendments we shall be
deleting the provisions contained in the Draft Constitution which make
provision for representations of Muslims, Sikhs, Anglo-Indians and so on.
Consequently this is unnecessary. But it is the feeling that since we have
taken a very important decision which practically nullifies the past it is
better that the Constitution should in express terms state it. That is the
reason why I have brought forward this amendment.
Mr. President : Do I take it that only for the purpose of discussion you
have brought it up and that you do not want it to be passed?
The Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : No, Sir, not like that. I have moved
the amendment. I was only giving the reasons why I have brought it up.
I shall move the other amendment also for inserting new article 289-B. I move:
“That for amendment No. 3087 of the List of Amendments, the following be substituted;-
“That after article 289-A, the following new article be inserted:-
289-B.
The elections to the House of the People and to the Legislative Assembly of
every State shall be on the basis of adult suffrage; that it to say, every
citizen, who is not less than
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|
Elections
to the House of the People and to the Legislative Assemblies of States to be
on the basis of adult suffrage.
|
twenty-one
years of age on such date as may be fixed in this behalf by or under any law
made by the appropriate Legislature and is not otherwise disqualified under
this Constitution or any law made by the appropriate Legislature on the
ground of non-residence, unsoundness of mind, crime or corrupt or illegal
practice, shall be entitled to be registered as a voter at any such election.’”
|
Shri
Brajeshwar Prasad (Bihar: General): Mr. President, Sir, I rise to
oppose article 289-B. I am opposed to adult franchise on grounds both
theoretical and practical. I am opposed to adult franchise because it is a
gross violation of the tenets of democracy. Adult franchise presupposes that
the electorate is enlightened. Where the electorate is not enlightened there
cannot be parliamentary democracy.
Mr. President : Is that open to objection now? We have already passed
article 149 in which it is expressly stated that the election shall be on the
basis of adult suffrage. It was passed in the winter session.
Shri Brajeshwar Prasad: Sir, I will submit to your ruling. I was not
present when that article was passed.
Mr. President : Then you cannot oppose it at this stage.
Shri T. T. Krishnamachari : This new article is actually redundant. It may
be that the Drafting Committee will subsequently have to take it away.
Mr. President : That is what he has also said. When the time comes for
rearranging the section it may not be necessary to have this section in this
form. But it has been moved.
Shri T. T. Krishnamachari : The principle is one which has been accepted by
the House.
Mr.
President : That is what I say. The principle has already
been accepted.
The question is:
“That with reference to amendment No. 110 of List I (Fifth Week), for the
proposed new article 289-A, the following article be substituted:-
289-A.
There shall be one general electoral roll for every territorial constituency
for election to either
|
|
No
person to be ineligible for inclusion in, so to claim to be excluded form,
the electoral roll on grounds of religion, race, caste or sex.
|
House
of Parliament or to the House or either House of the Legislature of a State
and no person shall be ineligible for inclusion in, or claim to be excluded
from, any such roll on grounds only on religion, race, caste, sex or any of
them’.”
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The amendment was adopted.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That article 298-A, as amended, stand part of the Constitution.”
The motion was adopted.
Article 289-A, as amended. was added to the Constitution.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That for amendment no. 3087 of the List of Amendments, the following be
substituted:-
“That after article 289-A, the following new article be inserted:-
289-B.
The elections to the House of the People and to the Legislative Assembly of
every State shall be on the basis of adult suffrage; that is to say,
|
|
Elections
to the House of the People and to the Legislative Assemblies of states to be
on the basis of adult suffrage.
|
every
citizen, who is not less than twenty-one years of age on such date as may be
fixed in this behalf by or under any law made by the appropriate Legislature
and is not otherwise disqualified under this Constitution or any law made by
the appropriate Legislature on the ground of non-residence, unsoundness of
mind, crime or corrupt or illegal practice, shall be entitled to be
registered as a voter at any such election.”
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The amendment was adopted.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That article 289-B, stand part of the Constitution.”
The motion was adopted.
Article 289-B, was added to the Constitution.
(New article 289-C was not moved.)
---------
Article
290
The
Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : Sir, I moved:
“That for article 290, the following article be substituted:-
290.
Subject to the provisions of this Constitution, Parliament may from time to
time by law make
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|
Power
of Parliament to make provisions with respect to elections to Legislatures.
|
provisions
with respect to all matters relating to, or in connection with, elections to
either House of Parliament or to the House or either House of the Legislature
of a State including matters necessary for securing the due constitution of
such House or House and the delimitation of constituencies.”
|
Sir, with your permission I would also like to move the other amendment which
amends this. I move:
“That with reference to amendment No. 123 of List I (Fifth Week) in the new
article 290, after the word ‘including’ the words ‘the preparation of electoral
rolls and all other’ be inserted.”
Pandit
Thakur Das Bhargava (East Punjab: General): Sir, I gave notice of
amendment No. 100 and amendment 127 and 129 with the idea that the entire
responsibility and jurisdiction for making laws in regard to elections should
be left to the Central Legislature and that the Central Legislature alone
should have been given this power to enact laws in regard to matters pertaining
to elections. Even now when amendment No. 99 was being discussed I felt that it
would not be necessary to have these new amendments if my amendments Nos. 100,
127 and 129 were accepted, because, according to me, it is not fair to give the
power to the executive to appoint such highly placed officers in whom all the
rights in whom all the rights and powers in regard to elections are
concentrated. Parliament should have the ultimate power. Similarly with regard
to my amendment No. 127 which I did not move when I found that the wording of
amendment No. 123 was “Subject to the provisions of this Constitution,
Parliament may from time to time by law make provisions with respect to all
matters relating to, or in connection with, elections............” When
Parliament has been given this power, I do not know what power is left to be
exercised under this article by the provinces. If we want uniformity in the
conduct of elections we should see that Parliament alone has this power.
Under article 289 many arguments were advanced for giving these powers to the
Central Government instead of to the provinces. If those arguments are valid,
it does not behove us to say that any power which is left may be exercised by
the provincial legislatures. Amendment No. 123 is all embracing and therefore
there is no need for amendment No. 128.
Shri M. Ananthasayanam Ayyangar : Sir, I support the retention of
amendment No. 128 moved to article 291. I do not agree with my Friend Mr. Bhargava.
We have taken away the elections from the provincial legislatures and the
Governors. Practically we have centralised the appointment of the Election
Commission. This is a deviation with respect to which there have been
complaints that the provincial governments have been made ciphers. To avoid
corrupt practices we wanted the entire power to be vested in Parliament.
Amendment 128 only says that for matters for which the Parliament does not make
a provision the provincial legislatures shall have power. My Friend Mr. Bhargava
does not want even this. According to him, either Parliament makes the law or
there should be no authority to make law. There may be certain matters where
for the sake of uniformity Parliament may make law and the State legislature
may make the rest of the laws. That is what is provided in amendment No. 128. I
do not know why even to this limited extent power should not be give to the
State legislatures. Why are we so suspicious of the State legislatures that we
want to take away everything form them? I support amendment no. 128.
Mr. President : I find that there is notice of an amendment by Prof. Shibban
Lal Saksena to article 290. He was not here at the time the amendments were
moved. Anyhow it is not an amendment of substantial character.
If Dr. Ambedkar does not want to say anything in reply I shall put the
amendment to vote.
The Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : I have nothing to say, Sir.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That for article 290, the following article be substituted:-
290.
Subject to the provisions of this Constitution, Parliament may from time to
time by law make provisions with respect to all matters relating to, or in
connection with, elections
|
|
Power
of Parliament to make provisions with respect to elections to Legislatures.
|
to
either House of Parliament, or to the House or either House of the
Legislature of a State including the preparation of electoral rolls and all
other matters necessary for securing the due constitution of such House or
Houses and the delimitation of constituencies.”
|
The amendment was adopted.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That article 290, as amended, stand part of the Constitution.”
The motion was adopted.
Article 290, as amended, was added to the Constitution.
--------
Article
291
The
Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : I move:
“That for article 291, the following article be substituted:-
291.
Subject to the provisions of this Constitution and in so far as provision in
that behalf is not made by Parliament, the Legislature of a State may from
time to time by law make
|
|
Power
of Legislature of a state to make provisions with respect to election to such
Legislature.
|
provisions
with respect to all matters relating to, or in connection with, the elections
to the House or either House of the Legislature of the State including
matters necessary for securing the due constitution of such House or House.”
|
Sir, with your permission I move also amendment No. 211 of List I VI. Fifth
week.
The amendment runs thus:
”That
with reference to amendment No. 128 of List I (Fifth Week), in the new article
291, after the word ‘including’ the words ‘the preparation of electoral rolls
and all other’ be inserted.”
Mr. President : There are also other amendments. Amendment No. 129 is a
negative one and so cannot be moved. Amendments Nos. 130 and 131 are not moved.
Does any Member wish to say anything on the amendment or the article?
Shri
H. V. Kamath : Mr. President, this article 291, following as
it does article 290 already adopted, is a corollary to it. Article 291 follows
very closely article 290 except with regard to the last matter contained in
article 290 relating to the delimitation of constituencies. The question here
arises as to the powers which will be vested in Parliament and in the State
Legislature. In article 290 it is stated that Parliament may from time to time
by law make provisions with respect to all matters-the phrase used is “with
respect to all matters”-relating to or in connection with elections, etc. Here
again the same words are used, that is to say, article 291 lays down that the
State Legislature may from time to time by law make provisions with respect to
all matters relating to or in connection with elections, etc. That is to say,
all matters relating to elections to either House of the State Legislature come
within the purview of Parliament as well as the State Legislature. Are we going
to define the limits of or demarcate the powers to be conferred on the
Parliament and on the State Legislature? Are we going to have another Schedule?
That is my question. Are we going to have a new Schedule to this Draft
Constitution wherein we will define the powers of Parliament and the powers of
the State Legislature to legislate with regard to matters relating to elections
in the States? If we do not define, definitely allocate the functions, I am
afraid it might lead to some sort of friction or tension between the Parliament
and the State Legislature at some time or other. No doubt the saving clause is
there in 291 “in so far as provision in that behalf is not made by Parliament”.
Sir, if the Parliament exhausts all matters relating to elections in the
States-the power to do is there under 290; the Central Parliament has full
power to make laws with respect to all matters relating to elections in the
States including delimitation of constituencies which is taken away from the
State-I do not quarrel with that-what will be left for the States? In regard to
various other matters relating to elections, I do not think it wise to deprive
the State Legislature of any jurisdiction in this regard. To my mind, it will
be better and wiser to leave them some powers so as to promote greater harmony.
We are here, I am afraid, aiming at over-centralisation of functions. Over-centralisation
to my mind is not conducive to harmony between the Union and the Units. We
certainly want strength, but strength along with harmony. Strength without
harmony, without good-will between the Union and the Units, is no strength at
all. It is mere rigidity. Therefore, Sir, I would personally prefer to be dealt
with by the State Legislature itself and Parliament should not be given entire
authority to make, laws with respect to all matters relating to elections to
either House of the State Legislature. Some definite powers to my mind should
be given to the Legislature of the State also.
The
Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : I think Mr. Kamath has not
properly read or has not properly understood the two articles 290 and 291.
While 290 gives power to Parliament, 291 says that if there is any matter which
is not provided for by Parliament, then it shall be open to the State
Legislature to provide for it. This is a sort of residue which Parliament may
leave to the State Legislature. This is a residuary article. Beyond that, there
is nothing.
Shri A. Thanu Pillai (Travancore : State): When steps have to be taken
according to the time schedule, is the local Legislature to wait and see what
the Central Parliament does?
The Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : Primarily it shall be duty of the
Parliament to make provision under 290. The obligation is squarely placed upon
Parliament. It shall be the duty and the obligation of the Parliament to make
provision by law for matters that are included in 290. In making provisions for
matters which are specified in 290, if any matter has not been specifically and
expressly provided for by Parliament, then 291 says that the State Legislature
shall no be excluded from making any provision which Parliament has failed to
make with regard to any matter included in 290.
Shri A. Thanu Pillai : May I know from Dr. Ambedkar whether it would not be
better for either the Central Legislature or the Local Legislature to be
charged with full responsibility in the matter so that elections may go on
according to the time schedule?
The Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : I do not agree. There are matters which
are essential and which Parliament might think should be provided for by itself.
There are other matters which Parliament may think are of such local character
and liable to variations from province to province that it would be better for
Parliament to leave them to the Local Legislature. That is the reason for the
distinction between 290 and 291.
Mr.
President : The question is:
“That with reference to amendment No. 128 of List I, (Fifth Week), in the new
article 291, after the word ‘including the words ‘the preparation of electoral
rolls and all other’ be inserted.”
The amendment was adopted.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That for article 291, the following article be substituted:-
291. Subject to the provisions of this Constitution and in so far as provision
in that behalf is not made by Parliament, the Legislature of a State may from
time to time by law make provisions with respect to all matters relating to, or
in connection with, the elections to the House or either House of the
Legislature of the State including the preparation of electoral rolls and all
other matters necessary for securing the due constitution of such House or
Houses.”
The motion was
adopted.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That article 291, as amended, stand part of the Constitution.”
The motion was adopted.
Article 291, as amended, was added to the Constitution.”
--------
Article
291-A
The
Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : Sir, I move:
“That after article 291, the following new article be inserted:-
Bar
to jurisdiction of courts in electoral matters.
|
291-A.
Notwithstanding anything contained in the Constitution-
|
(a)
the validity of any law relating to the delimitation of constituencies or the
allotment of seats to such constituencies, made or purporting to be made under
article 290 or article 291 of this Constitution shall not be called in question
in any court:
(b)
no election to either House of Parliament or to the House or either House of
the Legislature of a State shall be called in question except by an election petition
presented to such authority and in such manner as may be provided for by or
under any law made by the appropriate Legislature:
(c)
provision may be made by or under any law made by the appropriate Legislature
for the finality of proceeding relating to or in connection with any such
election at any stage of such election.”
Sir, I also move:
“That with reference to amendment No. 132 of List I (Fifth Week) in the new
article 291-A, clause (c) be omitted.
Mr.
President : The question is:
”That with reference to amendment No. 132 of list I (Fifth Week) in the
new article 291-A, clause (c) omitted.”
The
amendment was adopted.
Mr. President : The question is :
“That after article 291, the following new article be inserted:-
Bar
to jurisdiction of courts in electoral matters.
|
291-A.
Notwithstanding anything contained in the Constitution-
|
(a)
the validity of any law relating to the delimitation of constituencies or the
allotment of state to such constituencies, made or purporting to be made under
article 290 or article 291 of this Constitution shall not be called in question
in any court;
(b)
no election to either House of Parliament or to the House or either House of
the Legislature of a State shall be called in question except by an election
for by or under any law made by the appropriate Legislature;”
The amendment was adopted.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That article 291-A, as amended, stand part of the Constitution.”
The motion was adopted.
Article 291-A, as amended, was added to the Constitution.
Mr. President : Then we go to the other article 296.
Shri T. T. Krishnamachari : As articles 292 to 295 form part of a whole
scheme and article 296 also goes along with them, we might take up article 297
and leave 296 over for the present.
Mr. President : Is that the idea that we should postpone discussion of
article 296 also? Then we shall take up article 297.
--------
Article
297
(Amendment No. 3169 was not moved.)
Shri
H. V. Kamath : Mr. President, Sir, I move:
“That in clause (2) of article 297, for the words ‘if such members are found
qualified for appointment on merit as compared with the members of other
communities’, the words ‘provided that such appointment is made on ground only
of merit as compared with the members of other communities’ be substituted.”
I think, Sir, that this is an amendment more or less a drafting nature and I
leave it to the cumulative wisdom of the Drafting Committee to consider it at
the appropriate stage.
The Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar I do not see that it is of a drafting
nature. However, we shall consider it later on.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That article 297 stand part of the Constitution.”
The motion was adopted.
Article 297 was added to the Constitution.
--------
Article
298
(Amendment No. 3172 was not moved.)
Mr. President : There is no amendment to this article No. 298 also.
Mr.
Frank Anthony (C. P. & Berar: General) :Sir, I do not intend to
make a speech. I had given notice of an amendment to article 298 seeking to
make it applicable to the Mysore State, but after I had discussed my amendment
with Dr. Ambedkar and Mr. Munshi, it was pointed out to me that even if they
were prepared to accept my amendment, they were unable to do it at this stage
because it has not yet been decided as to whether this Constituent Assembly is
going to legislate for the Mysore State and because of that, Sir, I do not
propose to ask for admission of this amendment at this stage. If and when the
Assembly does legislate with regard to Mysore, then I feel that I may be given
permission at that stage to reiterate this amendment. In this connection, I
only wish to say a few words and to thank all those Members, who in spite of
the fact that they have given notice of several amendments, have once more
shown their generosity by withdrawing those amendments en masse.
Pandit Thakur Das Bhargava : Sir, when I gave notice of certain
amendments to articles 297 and 298, I did not do so in any spirit of
niggardliness or disregard for honouring the words of our leaders who had given
some sort of assurance to the Anglo-Indian community, but I must state in
fairness to myself that, as a matter of fact, it was a different standpoint
from which I gave these notices of amendments. When these concessions were
given to the Anglo-Indian community, it was in 1947 and ten years’ time was
regarded as sufficient. Ordinarily these ten years would have been finished by
1957. Now the Constitution will commence in 1950. So I thought that the
concessions should have been given only for ten years. I do not grudge any sort
of concessions to this community or that community but we must realise that the
basis of concessions given to the suppressed classes and depressed classes is
of a different nature. We want that these concessions may be implemented. Apart
from reservation of seats which is only for ten years, other concessions like
educational facilities etc., to be provided under article 301 may have to be
given for more than ten years. But here in this case this community is not a
suppressed community. This community has to a certain extent been given this
concession because its standard of life was different from the rest of the
Indian community and it was higher. So I gave amendments in the view that when
Mr. Anthony said on the last occasion when he spoke on the question of
minorities that the Committee had shown unique generosity I thought that his
community would respond by showing unique fairness in saying that they would
only want these concessions for ten years because I know that for every boy of
the Anglo-Indian community to whom this concession is granted, we have to grant
these very concessions to the upper classes also because in these schools to
which these grants are made, 40 per cent or so are Anglo-Indian boys and the
remaining 60 per cent. belong to the upper classes. So if we grant these
concessions, we should grant them not only to the Anglo-Indians but also to the
upper classes. After all our means are limited, and we cannot make one rupee
into seventeen annas and if you grant these concessions for very long periods
to people whose standard of life is better and who are more affluent, you would
have to deny even ordinary rights to the rest of the people. So that, for
educating these persons, you starve the boys of other communities. I think my honourable
Friend Mr. Anthony will not misunderstand me for giving notice of this
amendment. I gave notice of these amendments in the hope that in his
patriotism, in his recognition of the principle of fair treatment to all, he
will agree that only ten years will be available of and not more.
Prof.
Shibban Lal Saksena
: Mr. President, Sir, these two articles 297 and 298, one of which we
have already passed, give certain concessions to the Anglo-Indian community. I
may say at the very outset that I am not opposed to any concession which these
people may want. I may also say that I would wish them to make the best use of
the concessions. But, I would like to utter a word or warning. I feel that
these concessions are based on a principle which has not been followed anywhere
else in the constitutions. We have given separate representation to people who
are backward. But, in this case the position is different. The Anglo-Indian
community has up till now lived a different kind of life from the rest of the
people. They probably feel some difficulty in accommodating themselves to the
new change and therefore they want these concessions. I only want the
representatives of the community who are present here who are very
distinguished members and who are my very good friends, to consider coolly
whether these concessions will really benefit the community. My feeling is that
during the last so many years, this community has been kept aloof from the rest
of the population and the British people who kept us under subjection tried to
make them also completely isolated. They gave them a different kind of
education, different habits etc. I am only surprised that they still want to
keep to their old methods of education. I only hope that although these
concessions are given, the boys of that community will try to take advantage of
the common education given to all Indian boys, and that they shall not continue
any further their separation which was imposed by the British people for their
own purposes. I have known these friends through my contacts with labour on
railways and in the posts and telegraphs and in other places. They are very
active people; they form a virile element in the nation and I know they do not
need any crutches. Like the Pars, they will get more than their due even in the
general electorate and in the normal course of general competition. I therefore
think that these two articles are based on the apprehension that they may not
get their legitimate share in the circumstances. I wish to give this friendly
advice, if it is of any worth. I do wish this community to become one with the
rest of the people and to remove all those barriers of separation which the
British Rulers had raised between this community and the rest of the people, so
that when the time comes, at least after ten years, there is no need for them
to demand all these concessions, I hope they will realise that it is better
that they merge themselves in the general population. We all wish to feel that
they are one with us. I also know that they realise that the British had made
up pawns in their game. I hope that they will very soon give up those old
habits and traditions. I hope that these articles which we all approve
unanimously will not be supposed to be something intended to perpetuate the old
separation, but intended to help them to assimilate themselves with the rest of
the population.
Shri
Mahavir Tyagi : (United Provinces: General) : Mr. President, Sir, I
rise to oppose the article as it is. I know I will incur the displeasure of my
very great Friend Mr. Anthony. He is so charming that nobody in the House would
like to annoy him: but then, I want to give him an advice.
He has seen many minorities claiming special rights in India; he has also seen
their fate. Suppose we agree to this article. I do not know whether Mr. Anthony
agrees to it. If he is a party to this article, I am afraid he is doing a
disservice to his community. As it is mentioned in this article, we cannot give
more grants than we are giving them today. I do not know how we can agree to
this. After all, it is a progressive community; it is a privileged community.
It has the affection of both India and England. They are a bright community;
wherever they are, they fare very well; they are the least communal. They are a
very intelligent and bright people. In India they need have no fear; they have
to thrive. I ask why should they not deserve more grants or more help from the
State if they really deserve it. The article says during the first three years
after the commencement of this Constitution, the same grants if any, shall be
made by the Union and by each State. I ask, why not more grants? If their
students deserve more grants, why should we make the same grants? I do not know
whether you call it sympathy; it is a wrong-placed sympathy. I do not know how
my honourable and intelligent Friend Mr. Anthony would agree to the same
grants. The prices may go on rising, but the boys in the school will get the
same grants. Why not more? This is neither help nor any protection. I do not
want to waste the time of the House by reading the article further which says
that every third year there will be a reduction of ten per cent. Why should we
envisage a reduction at all? My view is this. Such a small community if you go
on identifying it as a community, as a minority, I assure you that community
will ultimately lose. Let them merge their identity into the whole nation and
belong to the nation without any distinction whatsoever. Their distinction of
beauty and colour is enough to distinguish them from us; that is a good
distinction. Let them stand on their own colour and on their beauty and on
their intelligence. Why should they take to the adjective ‘minorities’ and all that.
That is a slur on that community. That is a community which can stand on its
own legs and stand boldly. From the friendly manner in which the members of
this community are behaving, I think it is an insult to their attitude to say
that these people at all need any protection.
They need nothing. Their attitude is their own protection. I think it is better
we leave them to their natural protection God has given them. Then again when
we have one decided that we do not encourage any minorities or communities,
then, in the face of that, should only one small community be recognised? Well,
they will become the target of jealousy from all the rest of the communities.
It is only a little money that is being guaranteed, but for this little
privilege why should they become the target of hatred, jealousy and envy of all
other small communities? I think they will not fare well if they get this too
small a privilege, the losses entailed with it being much greater. And if
communities are to be considered I would suggest consideration of that
community which is only newly created-it is the community of displaced persons.
Why do you not protect these refugees who are homeless? Let us guarantee that
for 10 years they will get such and such privileges and they are the real
minority community deserving the help. In the provinces today nobody has ever
thought of giving them special privileges or help because they are Hindus but inspite
of their being Hindus or belonging to a religious majority community, they are
a deplorable small minority today in India. It is pity that it is now a year
gone and little has been done for them; and now the time has come when their
protection should have been our first thought and we should have protected
their rights of education, their accommodation and other things. If communities
are to be considered here in this Constitution, the most miserable community
that should be considered first is that of the refugees, but the refugees are
not considered even as a community. And why should we always take communities
be religious distinctions or by distinctions of their blood? Communities are a
group of people being affected in one common manner either adversely or in
better circumstances. Whatever the conditions, those who are affected together
similarly in similar circumstance become a community; and as such, if there is
any community which requires safeguards and protection, it is that of the
refugees. But they have never come forward for any special grant before us. I
would suggest that we do not allow this article to remain in this Constitution.
It will contain the germs of communalism. Why not purge the whole Constitution
of this disease altogether and why keep germ? They might develop and again we
might have to face another big problem of communalism and the same old history
of the Muslim League days might repeat itself. I would suggest with emphasis
that either the consideration of this article be also postponed or, if the
House or you are not pleased to postpone it for further consideration, I would
appeal to the House to reject the article here and now, and not care for your
private decisions of groups. Let us take liberty of our groups and say that it
being a dangerous article, if we allow it to remain, we shall allow this body
politic to remain diseased for ever. With these words I oppose the article.
Shri K. M. Munshi : Mr. President, Sir, I am sure that on a
matter of this importance we should appreciate all that happened in the past
and not reopen the discussion which has passed through several stages. The two
sections which are under discussion are the result of very long discussions and
suggested by a Special Committee appointed for this purpose, accepted by the
Advisory Committee and ultimately accepted by the House. Now after all that has
been said and done, it serves no useful purpose to repeat the arguments that
were advanced by certain sections of the House at different stages. The House
has always accepted that the Minorities Commission’s decisions as more or less
conclusive. We must realise the importance of the two points dealt with by my
Friend Mr. Tyagi. When this decision was arrived at by the House, the one point
which it had to consider was that this small community had been under the
protecting wings of the old Government in such a manner that it was impossible
for it to stand on its legs unless it were spoon-few by some kind of concession
for a small period of time. Over 60 per cent. of its adults are in certain
services. We need not go into the various causes of this situation, but a
sudden change would throw this community immediately on the streets. The second
point was that certain special grants were given to their educational
institutions. Those educational institutions as now being attested to by our
own educational authorities in various provinces have attained a high standard
of educational school and now that the schools take students from other,
communities the policy of some provincial Governments is that that standard
should be maintained for all schools. In Bombay, for instance in the Anglo-Indian
schools,70 per cent. of the students are not Anglo-Indians but members
belonging to other communities. Therefore these articles have been considered
from every point of view. They are only for a limited period of time. My appeal
therefore to the House is that a decision which has been come to after
considerable deliberation should not be disturbed, apart from a vote, even by a
discussion, which may not create a right impression in the country. I hope
Members will realise that any discussion or criticism would perhaps take away
from the generous gesture which the majority community made to this small
minority community.
Shri Krishna Chandra Sharma (United Provinces: General): Mr. President,
I very much appreciate the spirit of compromise and reconciliation and would
not grudge any help to any section of the people whatsoever, but my only
trouble is that article 9 in the Fundamental Rights says that the States Shall
not discriminate against any citizen on grounds only of religion, race, caste
or sex, etc. Now the State Funds are meant for education for all citizens.
Because A belongs to Muslim Community, B belongs to Hindu community and C
belongs to Parsee or Anglo-Indian community, therefore per capita they
will have different sums of money for their education and training, one
differing from the other simply because their religion or community differs, I
beg to submit, is against the spirit of this article. My second point is that
the grant is meant to be given to the institution. This money can be given on
the ground that the institution has a better standard of education, it is more
expensive or situated at a place where ordinary grants would not suffice, etc.
That may be the basis for greater grants to an institution like the Muslim
University at Aligarh or an Anglo-Indian institution at Naini Tal. I do not
grudge the grant but there should be a rational basis.
A further objection is that these are minute details which should be left to
the Education Department and the University, and not laid down by Parliament in
the Constitution. I do not find this in any other constitution in the world and
I do not think it would be advisable to do it here.
Honourable Members : The question may now be put.
Mr. President : I may point out that these article have been
brought in pursuance of decisions arrived at by the Advisory Committee on
Minorities and by some sort of agreement between the parties. So I do not think
there is any occasion to reopen what was then decided. It was also placed
before a previous session of the Assembly and accepted. So I do not think the
question need be reopened.
The question is:
“That the question be now put.”
The motion was adopted.
Mr. President: The question is:
“That article 298 stand part of the Constitution.”
The motion was adopted.
Article 298 was added to the Constitution.
--------
Mr. President : Article 299 is held over.
Article
300
The Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : Sir, I move:
”That
with reference to amendment No. 3186 of the List of Amendments in clause (1) of
article 300 after the word figure ‘Part I’ the words and figures ‘and Part III’
be inserted.”
Shri
A. V. Thakkar (Saurashtra) : Sir, I am very glad that this amendment
extends the benefits of welfare work for the tribal people of all the States
where they live at present. These tribal people come into the picture for the
first time now in this Constitution. It would have been a half measure if it
had been confined to tribal people in provinces only but not extended to those
in Indian States. But as now amended it is in the interest of all backward
tribal people. The same benefit to all backward people applies to article 301
and therefore there is greater reason that the same extension is given in
article 300.
Prof.
Shibban Lal Saksena : Sir, I support this article whole-heartedly. I
shall draw attention to the problem confronting us in the tribal areas. They
are some of the most backward people in the country. The British Government
tried to keep them secluded and attempts were sometimes made by missionaries to
convert them. I have visited many of these people and can say that they live a
kind of sub-human and miserable existence. This article is intended to devise
ways and means for bringing them to the normal level. But we should not rest on
our oars by merely passing this provision but should do our utmost to bring
them up to the normal level. The consciousness about them came first in 1931
when the British Government tried to give them separate representation.
Reforming bodies and people like our revered Shri Thakkar Bapa have worked
among them but much still remains to be done and we should see that these
people are made to take their rightful place in society.
Shri Mahavir Tyagi : Sir, this article is very halting from the
point of view of helping the scheduled areas. It only says that a Commission
may be appointed from time to time or whenever the President so likes to
enquire into and report on the conditions of these areas, and “the executive
power of the Union shall extend to the giving of directions to such a State as
to the drawing up and execution of schemes specified in the direction to be
essential for the welfare of the scheduled tribes in the State”. I wonder
whether there is anything constitutional about it. Why should we encumber a
Constitution with the mention of scheduled areas? They are backward and not
much of improvement has been effected in those areas. Half of my constituency is
partially excluded area, known as the Jaunsar Bawer. I know the conditions that
obtain in that area. Years ago when Committees had been appointed they looked
into the conditions. But looking into the conditions is not much of a job. Real
job is to improve the conditions. This article does not go far in improving
their conditions. It does not even give a ray of hope as to what will be done.
To know what the conditions are a Commission will be appointed. That is not
enough. It would be better if the article had been taken away from the
Constitution because it does not help the scheduled areas at all. There is
nothing positive about the article. Commissions can be appointed even without
the Union being authorised to appoint the Commissions. What is there to prevent
it from appointing Commissions or Committees or from making enquiries? So I
think the article is not at all positive. If there be anything important or if
any hope is hidden within these words or lines, I would like the Chairman of
the Drafting Committee to expose it to air so that the people residing in those
areas might also know what good future lies for them in between these lines. I
do not see any hope for them. It is with this view, just to provoke Dr. Ambedkar
or anyone on his behalf to give us an idea as to what is the meaning of
bringing in the scheduled areas here and what hope it offers, that I have
raised this point. If there is nothing and if only their mention is meant, then
I would rather prefer that the article is taken away.
Mr. President : Dr. Ambedkar, do you wish to say anything?
The Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : No, Sir.
Mr. President : The question is:
”That
with reference to amendment No. 3186 of the List of Amendments, in clause (1)
of article 300, after the word and figure ‘Part I’ the words and figures ‘and
Part III’ be inserted.”
The amendment was adopted.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That article 300, as amended, stand part of the Constitution.”
The motion was adopted.
Article 300, as amended, was added to the Constitution.
----------
Article
301
(Amendments Nos. 3189 and 3190 were not moved.)
Shri
H. V. Kamath : Mr. President, Sir, I move amendments Nos.
3191, 3195, 3196, 3197, 3198 and 3200 standing in my name.
I move:
”That
in clause (1) of article 301, the words ‘consisting of such persons as he
thinks fit be deleted.”
In my judgment these words are wholly superfluous. I may even go to the length
of saying that they cast a reflection upon the wisdom of the President. The
President when he appoints certain persons, certainly appoints such persons as
he thinks fit for the job with the commission of which those persons are
charged. It is absolutely pointless and purposeless to say here that he may “appoint
a Commission consisting of such persons as he thinks fit.” It may stop after “appoint
a Commission”. This adequately and sufficiently conveys the meaning intended in
this portion of the article.
Then I move:
“That in clause (1) of article 301, for the word ‘difficulties’ the word ‘disabilities’
be substituted.”
Bearing in mind what we have already adopted in this House I think the word “disabilities”
conveys the idea far better than the word “difficulties”. If we turn to the
Chapter on Fundamental Rights we find that the second part of article 9 refers
to “any disability, liability, restriction, condition” etc. The word “difficulty”
nowhere occurs in that very important article which seeks to abolish
discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste or sex. We have passed that
article. The word “difficulty” is to my mind hardly a constitutional term. I
have read several constitutions of the world, but I find that it finds no place
in constitutional terminology or parlance. The word ‘disability’ is a far more
appropriate word than the word “difficulty”. I am sure Dr. Ambedkar, steeped as
he is in constitutional lore and constitutional learning will have no
difficulty in accepting this amendment.
I move my next amendment.
”That
in clause (1) of article 301, for the words ‘grants should be given’ the words ‘grants
should be made’ be substituted.”
This is purely verbal amendment. I do not wish to press it home, but I leave it
to the collective wisdom of the Drafting Committee which I am sure will come
into play at the appropriate time.
Then I move:
“That in clause (1) of article 301, for the word ‘and’ (in line 10) the words ‘as
well as’ be substituted.”
That portion of the article reads thus as it has been moved before the House:
“The President may by order appoint a Commission ..... to remove such
difficulties and to improve their condition and as to the grants that should be
given for the purpose by the Union or any State and the conditions subject to
which such grants should be given...”
I think the meaning would be more exactly expressed by the phrase “as well as”
than by the single word ‘and’ here. That also I leave to the wisdom of the team
of wisemen which this House has appointed to draft the Constitution.
I next move amendment No. 3198-
”That
in clause (2) of article 301, for the words ‘a report setting out the facts as
found by them and’ the words ‘a report thereon’ be substituted.”
The clause as it stands reads thus :
“A Commission so appointed shall investigate the matters referred to them and
present to the President a report setting out the facts as found by them and
making such recommendations as they think proper.”
If my amendment is accepted by the House the clause will read as follows :
“A Commission so appointed shall investigate the matters referred to them and
present to the President a report thereon making such recommendations as they
think proper.”
This is only with a view to avoid cumbersome language and style and secure
brevity and precision, but not at the sacrifice of any substantial meaning.
Lastly, I move my amendment No. 3200 which runs thus :
”That
in clause (3) of article 301, the words ‘together with a memorandum explaining
the action taken thereon’ be deleted and the following words be added at the
end:-
for
such further action as may be necessary.’ ‘‘
“This clause of the article as it now stands runs thus:
“The President shall cause a copy of the report so presented together with a
memorandum explaining the action taken thereon to be laid before Parliament.”
My amendment seeks to modify it in this regard and if it is accepted by the
House, the clause will read as follows :
“The President shall cause a copy of the report so presented to be laid before
Parliament for such further action as may be necessary.”
This is a drafting amendment, plus an amendment of substance. There are two
parts to it. The first relates to the manner in which the President shall cause
a copy of this report to be laid before both the Houses of Parliament. The
clause, as it is now, makes it incumbent upon the President to affix a
memorandum to the copy of the report to be laid before Parliament. It does not
seem to be wise to lay down the manner in which the report should be presented
to Parliament by the President. If the President deems it necessary to submit a
memorandum along with the report he will certainly do so. The President will be
a wise man. I am sure we will not have as President a man who is not wise or
who is incompetent to do this duties in the interests of the nation. If the
President thinks it necessary to affix a memorandum to the report he will do
so. Why should we lay down in the Constitution things in such minute detail? It
is just a tremendous trifle to say that he must add a memorandum to the report.
That is the first aspect of my amendment.
The second part of my amendment relates to the sequel to the submission to
Parliament by the President of this report by the Commission. I think, Sir,
that the House is agreed on this point that Parliament, our sovereign
Parliament of Free India, shall have a definite say, a substantial voice in
whatever policy is going to be adopted or action taken with regard to the
welfare of the socially and educationally backward classes in our country. This
article has relation to the conditions of socially and educationally backward classes
in the Indian Union. Parliament, I am sure, will be entitled to ask that any
action taken with regard to the welfare of its backward people must be in
conformity with the policy that will be formulated by it. Therefore I am
anxious that with a view to having this implemented, when the report comes
before Parliament, further action should be taken by Parliament and not by the
President. The President will if need be, communicate to Parliament his own
reactions to the report, but should not be the final authority to take action
thereon. Parliament must have the last word on the action to be taken on that
report. Therefore, this last amendment of mine seeks to make that quite clear,
absolutely fool-proof and knave-proof, as Dr. Ambedkar might say, and make it
impossible for the President to divest Parliament of this inherent right to
take action on the report of the Commission submitted by the President to
Parliament. Therefore I have suggested the addition of the words “for such
further action as may be necessary”. It may be that within the next ten years
there may be no socially or educationally backward classes in our country. I
look forward to that day even before the expiry of ten years. We have the
example of Soviet Russia before us. Russia abolished illiteracy and brought
even the lowest state of the population to a fairly decent level in ten or
fifteen years. Can we not, with our ancient heritage and our background of
cultural and spiritual genius aspire to something better and to bring all these
backward classes within less than ten years to a socially and educationally
higher level? I hope, Sir, that within ten years we will have advanced a good
deal towards redeeming these fallen and so-called backward people and we shall
have no occasion to appoint a Commission for the submission of a report. I
shall be very happy if that day comes in less than ten years. But, as it is,
the Constitution provides for the appointment of a Commission. Then let
Parliament consider and deliberate on the report submitted by the Commission to
the President and let Parliament take such action as it deems fit or necessary
in this matter, so that within the ten-year period, when a Commission has been
appointed and its report comes before Parliament, Parliament may chalk but a programme
for the uplift and redemption of these educationally backward classes, and carry
it out. I trust that after the first ten-year period has expired, there will be
no need for the President again to appoint a Commission of this nature to
enquire into the conditions of the backward classes in our country. Sir, I move
these various amendments and commend them for the acceptance of the House.
The Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : Sir, I move:
“That in clause (3) of article 301, for the word ‘Parliament’ the words ‘each
House of Parliament’ be substituted.”
Mr. President : There are two amendments of which notice has been given by Pandit
Thakur Das Bhargava, Nos. 180 and 181 of the First List.
Pandit Thakur Das Bhargava : I do not wish to move the amendments but I
wish to speak on the article.
(Amendments Nos. 3192, 3193, 3194, 3199 and No. 181 of the First List were not
moved.)
Mr. President : The article and the amendments are now open to discussion.
Pandit
Thakur Das Bhargava : Sir, I consider that article 301 is one
of the most important articles of this Constitution. Left to myself, I would
call it the soul of the Constitution. So far as the Depressed Classes are
concerned, we have only reserved some seats for them. The rest we have not
done, and this article 301 seeks to complete the process of bringing them up to
normal standards. This article places upon the entire nation the obligation of
seeing that all the disabilities and difficulties of the Depressed Classes are
removed and therefore it is really a charter of the liberties of the backward
classes and in a sense this is an oath taken by the House, an oath to see that
within the coming years we will provide all the facilities which can be
provided by the nation for expiating our past sins. Now, Sir, in this country
there are backward classes some of whom have had reservation given to them so
far as representation is concerned, but the other classes have not been given
such reservations but they are equally backward. I would therefore have liked a
register to be made of all the backward classes including the present Depressed
Classes, and after the Commission had found out what their diffciculties and
disabilities were and a programme chalked providing facilities to every
member of these backward classes. If a particular class was economically very backward,
provision could be made that with regard to their houses in the villages, they
were given not only the residential rights but rights of disposal of their
properties. If we chalk out a programme after the Commission has investigated
their disabilities, we will be taking a great step towards the removal of those
disabilities. There are many disabilities pertaining to them which the House
fully knows and I need not go into them at this stage. What I want to say is
that so far as these classes are concerned, we should see to it that these
classes do not continue in the category of backward classes after they have
come up to normal standards so that their backwardness is not crystallized or
perpetuated. After they have reached normal standards, they should be taken
away from this category. If any community continues in backwardness, socially,
culturally or educationally, then it should not be a question of ten years or
fifteen years but up to the time they are brought up to normal standards,
facilities should be given and continued for them.
My next submission is that the article says “The President may be order
appoint, etc.” I have given notice of an amendment in this regard for
substituting the word ‘shall’ for ‘may’ and even if the word ‘may’ is used in
the article, I think it should be the obligation of the President to appoint
such a Commission. Even though the word ‘may’ has been used, it must be
construed as ‘shall’. Therefore I have no doubt that the President shall
appoint such a Commission and the Commission after making investigation into
the conditions of these classes, shall have to suggest in what particular
manner the steps suggested should be implemented. The article here simply says
that he shall cause a copy of the Report to be placed before Parliament. The
obligations of the Parliament are not given in article 301. I understand there
is provision for them in 299 which has been held over. I do not want to speak
now on that article, but what I want to submit is this : Now the safeguards for
minorities have been taken away, for instance for the Muslims and the Sikhs.
The only responsibility of the Parliament are the Scheduled Castes and the
backward classes. In regard to these classes, special officers are to be
appointed to see whether the fundamental rights which have been given to them
under this Constitution and the special facilities which are sought to be
provided for them after the investigation of the Commission are enjoyed by
these people or not. These classes are not only the responsibility of the
Central Parliament but of the State Legislature as well. But I submit they are
the special obligation of the Central Legislature. This article 301 is only the
material form of the Objectives Resolution. This article only gives the mechanism
by which the Objectives Resolution is carried out. We should provide in this
article that it shall apply not only to the communities for whom reservation
has been made but also to those for whom no reservation has been made but who
are all the same backward.
Sir, I feel great happiness in supporting article 301.
Prof. Shibban Lal Saksena : Mr. President, Sir, I whole-heartedly
support this article. I only wish to point out two things in this regard. The
first thing is according to the scheme of the Constitution, this Commission
will be appointed at the very outset of the commencement of the Constitution.
That means that as soon as our Constitution comes into existence, the President
shall appoint the Commission to investigate into the conditions of the
socially, educationally and culturally backward classes and then make its
report on how to remove their backwardness. We are using the expression ‘the
backward classes’ in several places in the Constitution, but we have not
defined them anywhere in the whole Constitution. I hope this Commission which
will specially investigate the conditions of the backward classes all over the
country will be able to tell us what is meant by the term “backward classes”.
When the Commission reports to the Parliament, I hope they will define the
terms “backward classes” and “depressed classes” in their report.
I also support the amendment of Mr. Kamath for the addition of the words “for
such further action as may be necessary”. That means that when the report is
made, the House must consider the ways and means of removing the backwardness
of these people. I think therefore that this amendment is necessary.
The Honourable Shri Satyanarayan Sinha : Sir, the question be now put.
Mr. President : The question is:
”That
the question be now put.”
The motion was adopted.
Mr. President : I have to put the various amendments to vote now.
The Honourable Shri Satyanarayan Sinha : If there is no other work then the
House should be adjourned.
Mr. President : The question is:
”That
in clause (1) of article 301, the words ‘consisting of such persons as he
thinks fit be deleted.”
The amendment was negatived.
Mr. President : The question is:
”That
in clause (1) of article 301, for the word ‘difficulties’ the word ‘disabilities’
be substituted.”
The amendment was negatived.
Mr. President : Amendments Nos. 3196 and 3197, I think, are of a drafting
nature. We had better leave them. The question is:
”That
in clause (2) of article 301, for the words ‘a report setting out the facts as
found by them and’ the words ‘a report thereon’ be substituted.”
The amendment was negatived.
Mr. President : The question is:
”That
in clause (3) of article 301, the words ‘together with a memorandum explaining
the action taken thereon’ be deleted and the following words be added at the
end:-
for
such further action as may be necessary.’”
The amendment was negatived.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That in clause (3) of article 301, for the word ‘Parliament’ the words ‘each
House of Parliament’ be substituted.”
The amendment was adopted.
Mr. President : The question is :
“That article 301, as amended, stand part of the Constitution.”
The motion was adopted.
Article 301, as amended, was added to the Constitution.
Mr. President : This brings us to the end of these articles which we have
set down for consideration today. One article which we passed over, article
289, remains to be considered. There were certain amendments and certain
Members said that they were taken by surprise and that they would like to have
time to consider it. If the House so desires, we might have an afternoon
session, so that we may not have to sit tomorrow.
An Honourable Member : We are prepared to discuss it now.
Mr. President : At 6 o’clock.
Shri K. M. Munshi : The sittings should not be fixed for tomorrows as many
Members, I know, have booked their accommodation.
Mr. President : It is therefore why I am suggesting six o’clock.
The Honourable Shri Satyanarayan Sinha : Either we can hold it over or
you have a meeting in the evening and finish it.
Mr. President : I think some Members feel that they would like to have time
to consider the amendments and therefore it is much better to give them time,
and if you all agree, I would like to have an afternoon session in the evening,
say at six o’clock.
Honourable Members : 6 p.m.
Mr. President : So the House stands adjourned till six o’clock this
evening.
The Assembly then adjourned till Six of the Clock in the afternoon.
---------
The Constituent Assembly re-assembled at Six of the Clock in the afternoon, Mr.
President (The Honourable Dr. Rajendra Prasad) in the Chair.
DRAFT
CONSTITUTION
-(Contd.)
Article 289-(Contd.)
Mr. President : We shall take up the amendment moved by Dr. Ambedkar
in the morning. I think that is the only amendment now to the original article
which was moved by Dr. Ambedkar.f
I have just received notice of amendments from two Members, Shri Mahavir Tyagi
and Mr. Jaspat Roy Kapoor. I do not know how these amendments come in at this
stage. They cannot be amendments to amendments; they can only be amendments to
amendments to amendment. I am not inclined to allow any amendments to
amendments to amendments.
Shri Jaspat Roy Kapoor (United Provinces : General) : May I then be permitted,
Sir, to put forth my view-point as contained in this amendment, of course
during general discussion?
Mr. President : The article and the amendment will be open to discussion.
Any Member may say whatever he likes. It is for him to vote according to what
he says or otherwise.
Shri Mahavir Tyagi : May I submit, Sir, if at any stage some serious
discrepancy is found and it is pointed out, I hope it must be taken notice of.
Mr. President : I do not think your amendment comes under that. In your
case, the amendment of which you have given notice does not deal with the
matter which has just been discovered.
Shri Mahavir Tyagi : I could not follow, Sir.
Mr. President : Your amendment is this: that in clause (1) of the proposed
article 289, the words “and Vice-President” be deleted. That is to say, you
want to keep the election of the Vice-President out of the purview of the
Election Commission.
Shri Mahavir Tyagi : Yes, Sir.
Mr. President : It is not a case in which something has been discovered as
a result of discussion which creates difficulty and this amendment becomes
necessary. This should have been foreseen and if you wanted to give notice of
an amendment, you should have given it before. I cannot allow this now.
Shri H. V. Kamath : May I request, Sir...........
Mr. President : I have given a ruling on Mr. Tyagi’s amendment. I am now
dealing with the other amendment.
Shri H. V. Kamath : For the future at least, may I know Sir, what is the
position with regard to amendment to amendments to amendments?
Mr. President : I am not going to make any promise about the future. I will
deal with every case as it comes up.
Shri H. V. Kamath : I want to know what is the rule, Sir.
Mr. President : The Member may rest assured, I will follow the rules.
Shri H. V. Kamath : I am not questioning that. As the rules are silent on
the point, I want to know what the position is with regard to amendments to
amendments to amendments.
Mr. President : As I have said, I shall decide each case as it comes up.
As regards the amendment of Mr. Jaspat Roy Kapoor, he may speak on it. The
article and the amendment are open to discussion.
Shri R. K. Sidhva (C. P. & Berar: General): May I know, Sir, whether the
discussion will be only on the amendment or on the article also?
Mr. President : The whole thing.
Shri Jaspat Roy Kapoor : Mr. President, Sir, if I rise to speak
on amendment No. 99 relating to article 289, it is not because I am fond of
speaking too often. While coming to the rostrum, Sir, it was suggested to me by
my honourable Friend Dr. Ambedkar that the galleries today were empty and that
I need not be very particular about speaking on this article. I may assure my honourable
Friend Dr. Ambedkar that I never speak to the galleries or with the object of
finding any prominent place in the Press. I speak only when I feel it is
absolutely necessary to speak and on this occasion, Sir, such is my feeling and
hence I have come before you to address on article 289.
I must confess, Sir, that on the last day of this session, article 289 has
proved to be rather an inconvenient one. It has been debated at length
yesterday and today and I find that the more it is being debated the more
defective it appears to be and I find that the more we scrutinise it the more
defects of it come to light. On a closer scrutiny of this article I find that
it is necessary to recast it altogether. A few amendments here and there, a few
alterations or changes here and there in this article would not do: it needs
being recast altogether. I do not suggest that it needs being recast in order
to meet the view-point of those who question the propriety of the Centre being
invested with the authority to conduct all elections. I take it that everyone
of us, or at least the overwhelming majority of us, is inclined to the view, is
definitely of the view that elections must be run under the control, direction
and supervision of an authority appointed by the Central Government, the
President I mean of course, subject to any law which may be enacted by the
Parliament. But, Sir, I think it is necessary to recast this in order to make
the procedure laid down in this article 289 as a really effective and workable
one so that there may be no conflict between the authority which is to be
appointed by the President-I mean the Election Commission-and the other bodies
in the Centre or in the provinces. As it is, however, I think that article 289
if allowed to remain in its present form would lead to conflict between the
Election Commission and the presiding officers of the various legislatures. Let
us see how it stands.
“The superintendence direction and control of the preparation of the electoral
rolls for, and the conduct of, all elections to Parliament and to the
Legislature etc. by the President.”
Now these are the various functions that are going to be entrusted to this
Election Commission. Superintendence, direction and control of what things,
firstly, of the preparation of the electoral rolls for all elections to
Parliament to State Legislatures and for all elections to the offices of
President and the Vice-President. The electoral rolls for these elections are
to be under the supervision, direction and control of this Election Commission.
Secondly, its function is the conduct of all these elections. These are the two
functions that are going to be entrusted to the Election Commission. Now let us
see how the election of the President is going to be, how the election of the
Vice-President is going to be, how the election of members of the Council of
States is going to be and lastly how the election of members to the Legislative
Councils of the States is going to be. Under article 43 which we have already
passed the President will be elected by the elected members of both Houses of
Parliament and by the elected members of the Legislative Assemblies of the
various States. Now the question is what will be the electoral roll of all
these members? Is it the intention of Dr. Ambedkar that the question as to who
are to be the electors who will form these electoral colleges is to be decided
by this Commission? Now the electors will be members who will have been already
duly elected to the House of the People, Council of States and the various
Legislative Assemblies. They will be already duly elected members. So the
question of preparing an electoral roll of these members simply does not arise
at all. It should not be open-I think it will be readily admitted-to the
Election Commission to decide as to which of those particular members are
unqualified. A person once having been duly elected can of course become
disqualified from remaining as a member; and so far as the Legislative Assembly
of the various States are concerned, we have only the other day enacted article
167-A which lays down that if any such question arises, it will be decided by
the Governor and the order or decision of the Governor shall be final. Now that
decision and order or the Governor being final what function remains for the
Election Commission to perform in the matter of determining the question as to
which particular members are entitled or not entitled to participate in the
election of the President? So far as the preparation of electoral roll is
concerned, the Election Commission has not function to perform. The second is
the stage of conducting the election itself. Now the question arises that the
members of the House of the People will be called upon to elect by President
and also members of the Council of States, and so also elected members of the
Legislative Assemblies of the various States. These person will cast their
votes as members of the various Legislatures and as such they must perform that
function of casting their votes under the supervision, direction and control of
the presiding officers of the respective legislatures. Is it the intention to
divest the presiding officers of these various legislatures of their ordinary
and inherent right of conducting these elections? I suppose not. So that so far
as the election of the President is concerned, both in the matter of the
preparation of the electoral roll as also in the matter of the conduct of
election, the Election Commission shall have absolutely no function to perform
or it has, obviously it will come in conflict with the presiding officers of
these various legislative bodies. Now let us come to the question of the
election of the Vice-President. There the matter is more complicated still. The
election of a Vice-President it was pointed out to us-the credit of which must
go to my honourable Friend Mr. Tyagi-it was pointed out by him outside the
House that under article 55 we have it “That the Vice-President shall be
elected by members of both House of Parliament assembled at a joint meeting
in accordance with the system etc.” Here also we find that the question as to
who shall vote for the election of Vice-President is already definitely
determined by article 55, and the Election Commission will have nothing to do
about this. The manner of conducting the election is also laid down in article
55. All the members will sit together in a joint meeting which will be
presided over, as has been provided, by the Speaker of the House of the People.
Where does the Election Commission come in as regards the election of
Vice-President? Thirdly comes the question of election of members of the
Council of States. Under article 67 they are to be elected by the elected
members of the legislative assemblies of the various States. There too the
members who will participate in the election are well-known; there is no
question of preparation of electoral roll there. Then as to the conduct of
elections and casting of votes, that will be done, as in the past, under the
direction and control of the Speakers of the various legislatures; and
interference by the Election Commission will lead to conflict with the
Speakers. The same objection will apply in the case of elections of these
members to the legislative Councils of the States who are to be elected by the
members of the legislative assemblies in the various States. Therefore, while
the underlying intention of article 289 is a laudable one and while we must
provide for elections to be conducted under the supervision and control of a
central authority appointed by the Central Government, we must so frame the
article as to obviate any chances of conflict between the Election Commissions
and the presiding officers of the various States, by taking away those things
which may give rise to such conflicts. We should also take note of article 55
in which we have provided for the election of Vice-President. Therefore I
submit that it is necessary to recast this article so as to make it applicable
to direct elections only to House of People and legislative assemblies. Today
we can commit ourselves definitely to the principle that all elections shall be
conducted under the supervision, direction and control of a central authority,
subject of course to such variations as appear obviously necessary in the light
of article 55 and in the light of what I have already submitted. That is what I
have to submit and the amendment of which I had given notice was only in regard
to these points that I have raised. If the difficulties and apprehensions that
I have raised are in any way removable by some interpretation of article 289
that Dr. Ambedkar may give, that is another thing.
Mr. President : I may point out that no explanation need be given. You are
assuming that in all these elections members will give votes while sitting in
Parliament. But they will not be sitting in Parliament; they will vote as
voters of that particular constituency.
Shri Mahavir Tyagi : What will happen as regards disputes, and the filing
of nomination papers before the Speaker?
Mr. President : It will be for the Election Commission to decide who the
returning officer for this election will be. The whole argument is based on the
assumption that when members of the legislatures who are entitled to vote for
the election of the President sit, they sit in a session of the Assembly. They
are not going to do that. They will be members of an electoral college and they
will vote in that capacity.
Shri Mahavir Tyagi : In the case of the election to Vice-President, the
names are to be proposed in the House by honourable Members, then it will be
seconded and nomination papers are to be filed, etc.
Mr. President : You are again assuming that it will be a session of the
House.
Shri Jaspat Roy Kapoor : My submissions were based on that assumption
surely, but I do not know if there can be any other assumption. We find
everywhere that members shall be electing the President, Vice-President and
members of the Council of States as members of the legislature and in no other
capacity. For instance, we find in article 55 that the Vice-President will be
elected by members of both Houses of Parliament in a meeting.
The Honourable Dr. B. R. Ambedkar : The wording is “at a joins meeting” and
not “sitting”.
Shri Jaspat Roy Kapoor : It will be all right if that point is
authoritatively stated on the Floor of the House so as to avoid the possibility
of this article being interpreted differently, for in articles 80(3) and 164(3)
the word ‘meeting’ has obviously been used in the sense of a sitting of the
legislature and not in the sense of merely a congregation of the members. The
same word cannot be interpreted differently in different article unless
definitely specified therein. There is all I have to submit.
Sardar
Hukam Singh (East Punjab: Sikh): Sir, article 289 as has been lately
amended is surely a very important provision for the safeguarding of-as the
Mover said, cultural, racial or linguistic minorities. It is conceived with the
very laudable idea that it will give protection to them against any provincial
prejudices or whims of officials. But there is one thing that I am afraid of.
Whereas sufficient protection has been given against injustice to racial,
cultural of linguistic minorities so far as provincial prejudices are
concerned, it has been assumed that the Centre will not be liable to corruption
at any time. We are perhaps obsessed with the feeling that our present leaders,
who are noble and responsible people and are at the helm of affairs now, will
continue for ever or that their successors will be as responsible as they are.
My fear is that in future that may not be so and with a little prejudice or
unsympathetic attitude at that time the minorities may be in great danger. I am
certainly against centralisation of powers and I feel that in this Constitution
we are reducing the provincial Governments to the position of District Boards
by centralising all power here. But I am not opposing the present amendment
because we have been assured that it is to safeguard the interest of these
minorities. I rather welcome it. But I want to make one observation about that
and that is that this Commission will have very important to perform and one of
them would be delimitation of constituencies. Of course this business would be
the soul of all elections. If delimitation of constituencies is made with full
sympathy to the minorities it might restore their confidence and they might
never feel sorry for what they have done-I mean this voluntary giving up of all
safeguards of reservation of seats. So far as the majority is concerned it has
nothing to fear. So far as the Scheduled Castes are concerned they are quite
safe because they have got that reservation of seats. So far as the
Anglo-Indians are concerned they will be nominated if they are not adequately
represented. But for other minorities such as Muslims and Sikhs I feel that if
they are not properly represented they might lose confidence in that majority.
This Commission shall have a very responsible task to perform in that respect
when it is carving out those constituencies. If the Commission, as our object
is, feels that responsibility and does its job with full responsibility then I
am sure the minorities shall have nothing to fear. But with a little apathy and
some ill-adjustment in the delimitation this Commission can certainly work much
havoc and those minorities may not even get what they ordinarily would have got
according to their population. So my object in making this observation is that
in the beginning at least the Government should take care that this Commission
is so constituted that every interest is represented on that Commission, and
this the Government can do very easily. By this they would restore all
confidence in the minorities. This would go a long way in achieving the object
which we have in view, namely, that we should have one nation, all people
welded together. If the Government were simply to give an assurance that it
would give sympathetic consideration to this request of mine, that for the
beginning at least this Commission shall be representing all interests, my
object would be achieved and the minorities also would not feel apprehensive of
their future fate. With these remarks I welcome this article as now proposed in
this House.
Shrimati Annie Mascarene (Travancore State): Mr. President, Sir, after
hearing Dr. Ambedkar’s explanation two days back I thought I would abide by
this article. But after listening to Mr. Munshi’s speech this morning I am
provoked to speak again on the subject and resume my old position. Sir, I am a
believer in the right of the people of the province to elect their
representatives independent of any control, supervision and direction of any
power on earth. I believe that to be democracy. If the Centre is to think that
expediency demands that they should supervise and control the election, as one
sitting in the Provincial Legislature I can see in the Centre as many
delinquencies as they see in us. From this article it looks as if the Centre is
assuming to be the custodian of justice. Well, justice is not in the custody of
anybody but of those who are lovers of truth. Mr. Munshi this morning spoke
that article 289 is calculated to defend the rights of the people in the
provinces in view of expediency and reality. May I remind him of the expediency
and reality of nations in days long gone by-of the Parliament of Rome, of the
Long Parliament of England? Cromwell thought that it was expedient to run the
administration by a unicameral legislature. The Napoleonic heroes thought that
it was expedient to run the administration by a unicameral legislature. But
time has proved the effect of those expediencies. What is reality and
expediency today is not reality and expediency tomorrow. We are here laying
down principles-rudimentary principles-of democracy, not for the coming
election but for days to come, for generations, for the nation. Therefore
principles of ethics are more suitable to be considered now than principles of
expediency. I am a believer in politics as nothing but ethics writ large. I am
not a believer in politics as a computative principle of addition, subtraction
and multiplication. If this section is to be accepted we are to believe that
thereafter the provincial election will be under the perpetual tutelage of the
Centre. That means, Sir, that the integrity of the provincial people is
questioned. I wish to turn the tables on the Centre itself. Sir, should we, at
this psychological moment when the people of India are demanding their
rudimentary right of electing their representatives without being interfered
with by any authority on earth, impose any restriction? If democratic
principles are to be accepted, this article should be deleted from the
Constitution.
Then I come to the latest amendment, giving the legality of Parliament to a
section which was hitherto blooming as autocratic. Well, Sir, Whatever may be
the amendment added on to it, it cannot lose its old shade or colour and it
stands there as the ancient Roman tutelage under the patriarchal system. If the
provincial or the States people are to be guided, let them be guided by
experience. If we have erred, we will err only for a time or a period. They say
that this is a deviation from the democratic principle. Well, I ask where is
the necessity to deviate from the experience of nations and ages? Have you any prima
facie case to show that we have erred in our democratic principles? In that
case I am willing to accept this clause. But, as it is, we have not tried the
experiment. We are only in the making of it. If in the experimental stage we
fail, well, there is provision in the Constitution to amend it when time and
circumstances demand. But let us not sully the fair name of the nation by
believing in the first instance that the provincial people will not be guided
by principles of truth and justice and will not keep up the democratic
principles of fairness by electing by fair means. Centralisation of power is
good enough for stable administration, but centralisation of power should be a
development at later stages and not from the very inception of democracy. At
the very inception of democracy, centralisation would look more autocratic than
democratic. We are living in an age when democratic experiments are being tried
by many a nation. Dr. Ambedkar quoted from the Canadian Act of 1920. How is it
that he did not travel down to the United States from Canada? Why would he not
look at the Australian Commonwealth? If Canada has adopted a measure, is it
necessary that India, with twenty-five times the population of Canada and half
the size of Europe, should adopt those very principles in her Constitution and
take it as a salutary example for experiment in democracy? If democracy could
succeed in the United States, if it can succeed in England, why should it not
succeed in India without this clause? Well, Sir, I hope this House will give
consideration to this article and be guided by principles of democracy rather
than by principles of expediency.
Shri
H. V. Kamath : Mr. President, article 289 of our Draft
Constitution dealing as it does with elections and electoral matters has
naturally evoked intense interest in this House and I am sure it has evoked or
is bound to evoke equally keen interest outside the House as well. If we
compare article 289 as it was originally drafted by the Drafting Committee and
the article as it has come before the House today, we cannot fail to notice
some salient differences, the main difference being that the superintendence,
direction and control of all elections to State legislatures have been radically
modified in the draft article as it was moved by Dr. Ambedkar yesterday and
amended by him today. The footnote to this article on page 138 of the Draft
Constitution reads thus:
“The Committee is of opinion that the Election Commission to superintend,
direct and control elections to the Legislature of a State in Part I of the
First Schedule should be appointed by the Governor of the State.”
This was apparently the Drafting Committee’s original view. But later on the
view underwent some transformation and, in so far as the Election Commission
for a State a concerned, the Governor has disappeared from the picture. I fail
to see why the Governor, now that he is going to be nominated by the President,
should not have any voice in the matter of the Election Commission to
superintend, direct and control the elections to the State legislature. If honourable
Members will turn to article 193(1) they will find that even where appointments
of High Court Judges in a State are concerned, the Governor of that particular
State has been invested with some authority in the matter. That relevant clause
reads as follows:
“Every
judge of a High Court shall be appointed by the President by a warrant under
his hand and seal after consultation with the Chief Justice of India, the
Governor of the State...”
I cannot understand why the Governor of the State should have no voice
whatsoever in the appointment of the Regional Election Commissioner or the
Election Commissioners of that State. The article as it has been modified by
Dr. Ambedkar confers power on the Governor of the State in so far as supplies
are concerned, such as staff, furniture and I do not know what else. As far as
these are concerned, the Ruler of the State or the Governor of the State shall,
when requested, by the Election Commissioner make available in the
Election commissioners or the Regional commissioner, such staff as may be
necessary for the discharge of the functions conferred on the Election
Commission by clause (1) of this article. That, Sir, to my mind is a sort of
anti-climax to the whole scheme of the article. In my humble judgment there is
no valid reason whatsoever why the Governor should be deprived of the right of
even exercising his voice or giving the benefit of his opinion in so far as the
appointment of Election Commissioners for the State is concerned. The executive
head of the Union is the President and the executive head of the State is the
Governor. May I ask the House why, if we seek to invest the President who is
the constitutional head of the Union with such vast powers in the appointment
of Election Commissioners for the whole of India, we should not give the
Governor the right to give his opinion, his judgment in the appointment of
Election Commissioners for his State? I fail to see any reason whatsoever for
not giving the Governors any powers exception in so far as providing the staff
is concerned, how many clerks, how many superintendents and how many assistants
are required for the Election Commissioners. A sort of Bada Babu the
Governor has become so far as the Election Commission is concerned. You are
making him nothing more. I submit that this is utterly derogatory to the
dignity of the Governor of a State. I cannot understand why the Governor is
being asked to supply the staff when he has no voice in the appointment of the
Election Commissioner. I strongly object to this denudation of the Governor’s
authority, so far as the office of the Election Commission is concerned. Again,
I personally feel that clause (5) is absolutely unnecessary. We are burdening
the Constitution with redundant details, with purposeless and meaningless
details. Certainly every office will have to have necessary staff. But why put
it down in the Constitution? The President of the Indian Union and the Governors
of the States will certainly require staff for their offices, but we have not
mentioned that in the Constitution. Why mention then that the Election
Commissioners at the Centre of the Regional Commissioners in the provinces
shall be provided with necessary staff. What I ask is this. Is it conducive to
the dignity of our Constitution if we burden it with such unnecessary details,
such minutiae?
Next I pass on to the amendment which has been moved by Dr. Ambedkar today
after listening to the debate in the House yesterday and today. I feel that the
amendment which has been placed before the House today is a sort of
half-hearted concession to the viewpoints that have been put forward in this
House. We are dealing with elections and electoral matters. Parliament is the
supreme elected body in the Indian Union and so Parliament must have greater
voice in the matter of superintendence, direction and control of elections.
With a view to serving this purpose, my Friend Prof. Shibban Lal Saksena moved
certain amendments yesterday. The amendment that has been moved by Dr. Ambedkar
today meets of those amendments, some of those viewpoints half way. I
personally think-I may be wrong in the assertion-but I believe that Dr. Ambedkar
individually is inclined to go the whole hog. I shall not venture to make a
statement on that point, and I have to take the amendment as it has been placed
before the House. Clause (4) of the article moved by Dr. Ambedkar yesterday
says that the conditions of service and tenure of office of the Election
Commissioners and the Regional Commissioners shall be such as the President may
by rule determine. Today the amendment placed before the House says, “subject
to the provisions of any law made by Parliament, the conditions of service and
tenure of office of the Election Commissioners and the Regional Commissioners
shall be such as the President may by rule determine.” There are two things,
the Parliament’s law and the President’s rule. Why, may I ask, in fairness to
this House and the future Parliament of the Indian Union, should we not say
that the conditions of service and tenure of office shall be such as Parliament
may by law determine? Why also say “as the President may by rule determine”?
The President in the executive head of the Union, while Parliament is the
supreme elected body. Why then leave it to the President to frame rules in this
regard?
The next point is, why the Chief Election Commissioner’s conditions of service
and tenure of office are made so very secure he is almost irremovable-except on
a vote of two-thirds majority of both the House of Parliament. Why has he been
made almost irremovable, while his colleagues at Election Commissioners are,
according to this article, removable at the sweet will and pleasure of the
Chief Election Commissioner? Is this the way that this House is going to treat
the colleagues of the Chief Election Commissioner? Even a clerk in a District
office or in the Secretariat has got far better conditions of service and
security of tenure than what is envisaged for the Election Commissioners in
this article. I feel, Sir, that with the article left as it is, most of the
time of the Election Commissioners will be utilised in doing what I may call
khushamat, to keep the Chief Election Commissioner in good humour, because
it will be only natural, human nature being what it is, lest the Chief Election
Commissioner should give a bad chit. So this is what we are trying to provide
by means of this article. I personally know that a superior officer often gives
a bad chit, not because his subordinate is bad at his work but because he is of
independent views, is of strong mind or does not humour his boss. This sort of
thing should not be encouraged, but I am afraid that is what this article might
do.
Pandit Lakshmi Kanta Maitra (West Bengal: General): How can Members be
sacked by the Election Commissioner, I cannot understand.
Shri H. V. Kamath : Not members but Election Commissioners. You are not
listening properly. I think you honourable Friend is in a hurry to go home.
Pandit Lakshmi Kanta Maitra : I am listening to you, but I am getting more
and more confused as you proceed.
Shri H. V. Kamath : The second proviso to clause (4) to this article moved
yesterday by Dr. Ambedkar is to the effect that “provided further that any
other Election Commissioner or a Regional Commissioner shall not be removed
from office except on the recommendation of the Chief Election Commissioner.”
Is it clear now? I want the Election Commissioners to be placed on a par with
the Chief Election Commissioner. We have adopted the article with regard to the
removal of Supreme Court Judges and High Court Judges, placing them on a par
with one another. There is no distinction between the Chief Justice and his
colleagues. I ask, therefore, Sir, why this distinction between the Chief
Election Commissioner and the Election Commissioners?
Pandit Lakshmi Kanta Maitra : That has been provided in the case of the
Chief Commissioner. They would be done on the recommendation of the Chief
Commissioner.
Shri H. V. Kamath : Perhaps the language of the article is not clear. If of
course, the article means that the Chief Commissioner and his colleagues the
Election Commissioners and the Regional Commissioners, all these can be removed
only in a like manner and on like grounds as a Judge of the Supreme Court, then
it is all right. The removal, the conditions of service and tenure of office of
the Election Commissioners and the Regional Commissioners have been made so
tenuous that with these conditions before them, men of real merit, men of
ability and competence may not like to serve on the Election Commission
(Interruption). There is the President to pull me up if necessary. I hope there
is only one President in the House. I will bow to his ruling and to none other’s.
The President’s command I will obey.
Then, Sir, there are one or two more points which I would like to stress before
the House. I feel that so far as the Regional Commissioners are concerned, that
is, the Commissioners for a particular State are concerned, I have already
stated that the Governor of the State should be consulted by the President
before he appoints Election Commissioners for that State. As it is, we are
watering down provincial autonomy to a considerable extent in this
Constitution, but certainly there is no harm if in appointing the Election
Commissioners for the particular State the Governor of the State is consulted.
After all the Governor is not going to be elected now. He is going to be
nominated by the President; he is the President’s nominee and more or less a
creature of the President. The President will have full confidence in the
Governor of the State; he is not going to be an elected Governor at all but a
nominated Governor. If the President cannot trust even his own nominee. I do
not know whom else he can trust. So, I suppose some sort of a suitable
alteration will be made in this regard providing for consultation with the
Governor by the President, especially in view of the fact that even as regards
the appointment of a High Court Judge in a State, we have provided that the
President shall consult the Governor of the State. I fail to see why the
Governor should not be invested with a similar power in regard to the
appointment of Regional Commissioner.
Next, so far as the removal of Regional Commissioners is concerned, it should
not be left so very delightfully easy as it is now in this article. I feel that
there must be more secure conditions of tenure and of service. It Parliament
can have no voice-Parliament at the Centre and the Legislature in the State can
have no voice-in the removal of Regional Commissioners I at least feel that
they should be removed only by the whole Election Commission and not simply by
the Chief Election Commissioner and his colleagues. The one-man show must
cease. It is all a one-man show at present. Now, of course we are going to
adopt an amendment to the effect that “subject to any law made by Parliament”,
but so far as the removal is concerned, according to the article it is a
one-man show,-the removal of the Election Commissioners or Regional
Commissioners. This should not be. The removal must be made more difficult:
otherwise, I warm the House that no men of proved merit, ability or competence
will come to serve on the Election Commission when the conditions of service
are so very insecure.
Then, Sir, there is one point made by my honourable Friend, Prof. Shibban Lal Saksena
and that the Regional Commissioners must be appointed by the President not
merely in consultation with, but in concurrence with the Election Commission. I
think that is a safe rule to adopt, that the President should not have the only
word, but he must be guided by the opinion of the Chief Commissioner with whom
he must concur in the matter of appointment of his colleagues. After all when
the President has appointed then Chief Commissioner, I see no reason why the
President cannot get suitable men about whom both are in agreement. Certainly
India is a vast country, and she can produce men for every place and for every
office that the future may have in store; and I am sure for this job of
Election Commissioner there will certainly be men available about whom the
President and the Election Commission can agree, and both in agreement with
each other can appoint the Regional Commissioners. These are the lacunae and
pitfalls in the article and the amendments that have been moved by the Honourable
Dr. Ambedkar before the House. I have serious misgivings about the working of
this article. I have doubts about the way in which it will work, unless it is
further amended suitably. Unless it is so amended, I am sure the Election
Commission at the Centre and in the State will not function as well as we all
want it should, and it is, I dare say, the unanimous desire of the whole House
that with elections looming on the horizon, the first general elections should
be conducted in an able, impartial, efficient manner. There can be no two
opinions on that point. I, however, fear that that object may not be achieved
by this article. This is a possibility which I for one do not like to envisage.
I desire that a suitable method should be devised to have more competent, more
impartial and more efficient Election Commissions in the States as well as at
the Centre to conduct elections. What I fear is that this article moved by Dr. Ambedkar
may not serve that purpose. I hope that Dr. Ambedkar and his wise men of the
Drafting Committee will take into consideration this matter, if not now, at a
later stage perhaps, and try to make further suitable amendments in this
article. The House, I am sure, will consider this matter more carefully because
it is not a matter to be lightly treated, for members to laugh at and smile.
They might live to weep another day. If we are in a hurry to go home, I wish
that this article may be held over. It is not a laughable matter at all and if
Members are tempted to laugh, I wish them joy of it. Sir, I trust that the
article will be suitably modified in the light of my observations.
Some Honourable Members : The question be now put.
Mr. President : Closure has been moved. The question is:
“That the question be now put.”
The motion was adopted.
Mr. President : I will first put the amendment which Ambedkar has moved
last.
The question is:
“That in amendment No. 99 of List I in the proposed article 289-
(i) in clause (1) the words ‘to be appointed by the President’ occurring at the
end be deleted.
(ii) for the clause (2), the following clauses be substituted:-
‘(2)
TheElection Commission shall consist to the Chief Election Commissioner and
such number of other Election Commissioners, if any, as the President may from
time to time fix and the appointment of the Chief Election Commissioner and other
Election Commissioners shall, subject to the provisions of any law made in this
behalf by Parliament, be made by the President .’
‘(2a)
When any other Election Commissioner is so appointed the Chief Election
Commissioner shall act as the Chairman of the Commission.’
(iii)
in clause (4), before the words ‘The conditions of service’ the words ‘subject
to the provisions of any law made by Parliament’ be inserted.”
The amendment was adopted.
Mr. President : I will put Prof. Shibban Lal Saksena’s amendment. I think
there will be a little change because of the new arrangement.
Dr. President : The question is:
”That
at the end of clause (1) the following words be added:-
’Subject
to confirmation by two-thirds majority in a joint session of both the Houses of
Parliament’ .”
The amendment was negatived.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That
after the word ‘appoint’ in clause (2) the following be inserted:-
Subject
to confirmation by two-thirds majority in a joint session of both the Houses of
Parliament.’”
The amendment was negatived.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That in clause (3) for the words ‘after consultation with’, the words ‘in
concurrence with’ be substituted.”
The amendment was negatived.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That in clause (4) for the words ‘President may by rule determine’, the words ‘Parliament
may by law determine’ be substituted.”
The amendment was negatived.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That
in proviso (1) to clause (4) for the words ‘Chief Election Commissioner’ the
words ‘Election Commissioners’ be substituted, in both places.”
The amendment was negatived.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That in proviso (2) to clause (4), the words ‘any other Election Commissioner
or’ be omitted.”
The amendment was negatived.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That
for article 289, the following article be substituted:-
289.
(1) The superintendence, direction and control of the preparation of the
electoral rolls for, and the conduct of, all elections to Parliament and to
the Legislature of every State
|
|
Superintendence,
direction and control of elections to be vested in an Election Commission.
|
and
of election to the offices of President and Vice-President held under this
Constitution, including the appointment of election tribunals for the
decision of doubts and disputes arising out of or in connection with election
of Parliament and to the Legislatures of States shall be vested in a
Commission (referred to in this Constitution as the Election Commission).
|
(2) The Election Commission shall consist of the Chief Election Commissioner
and such number of other Election Commissioners, if any, as the President may
from time to time fix and the appointment of the Chief Election commissioner
and other Election Commissioners shall, subject to the provision of any law
made in this behalf by Parliament, be made by the President.
(2a) When any other Election Commissioner is so appointed the Chief Election
Commissioner shall act as the Chairman of the Commission.
(3) Before each general election to the House of the People and to the
Legislative Assembly of each State and before the first general election and
thereafter before each biennial election to the Legislative council of each
State having such Council, the President shall also appoint after consultation
with the Election Commission such Regional Commissioners as he may consider
necessary to assist the Election Commission in the performance of the functions
conferred on it by clause (1) of this article.
(4)
Subject to the provisions of any law made by Parliament the conditions of
service and tenure of office of the Election Commissioners and the Regional
Commissioners shall be such as the President may by rule determine:
Provided
that the Chief Election Commissioner shall not be removed from office except in
like manner and on the like grounds as a judge of the Supreme Court and the
conditions of service of the Chief Election Commissioner shall not be varied to
his disadvantage after his appointment:
Provided
further that any other Election Commissioner or a Regional Commissioner shall
not be removed from office except on the recommendation of the Chief Election
Commissioner.
(5) The President or the Governor or Ruler of a State shall, when so requested
by the Election Commission, make available to the Election Commission or to a
Regional Commissioner such staff as may be necessary for the discharge of the
functions conferred on the Election Commission by clause (1) of this article.”
The amendment was adopted.
Mr. President : The question is:
“That article 289, as amended stand part of the Constitution.”
The motion was adopted.
Article 289, as amended, was added to the Constitution.
---------
ADJOURNMENT
OF THE HOUSE
The
Honourable Shri Satyanarayan Sinha: Mr. President, Sir, in the rules
of procedure of this House, rule 19, there is a proviso that the House cannot
be adjourned for more than three days by the President unless the House authorises
him to do so. Therefore I move this formal motion:
“Resolved that the House do adjourn until such date in July 1949 as the
President may fix.”
No date is specified; the President will fix the date.
An Honourable Member : Why put down the month?
The Honourable Shri Satyanarayan Sinha : The month is fixed; the President
shall fix the date.
The Honourable Shri Ghanshyam Singh Gupta : (C. P. & Berar: General):
That means that the President shall have no choice in regard to the month.
Shri Honourable Shri Satyanarayan Sinha : The motion is simply that the
House to adjourn until such date in July 1949 as the President may fix. He
cannot alter the month; he can fix a date.
Mr.
President : Before I put this motion to the House, I desire to
explain the situation and the programme as I envisage it. May own idea is that
we should be able to finish the second reading by the 15th of August.
Thereafter, we shall have to adjourn for some time to enable the Drafting
Committee to prepare the Constitution in its final form for the third reading.
That might take some weeks. Therefore, we shall have to meet from time in
September. That should also be subject to this that we are able to pass the
third reading by the second of October. That is my wish. If the House generally
agrees to this tentative programme, I shall fix the dates in consultation with
the Drafting Committee and perhaps with the members of Government who are
principally concerned in this.
Shri Mahavir Tyagi : Could you also give an idea as to how long you may
require us to sit in the month of July?
Mr. President : I could give you an idea. The Assembly cannot meet before
the 15th of July, because, as I said the other day, the adjournment has been
necessitated by the fact that there are certain provisions which have to be
considered consultation with the Provincial Ministers and the Finance Minister
has also to be present at these consultations. The Finance Minister is going to
England in connection with the Sterling Balance negotiations, and he will be
coming back some time early in July. We cannot expect that this Conference of
Provincial Ministers may take place before the 15th of July. Therefore, the
House cannot meet before the 15th of July. The question is as to on what exact
date after the 15th of July we should be able to meet. I shall try to adjust
that in consultation, as I have said, with the Drafting Committee and with the
Government.
Shri Mahavir Tyagi : I want to know the length of period for which we
will have to sit.
Mr. President : As I have said, from the day we begin up to the 15th or
August; that is as I envisage.
Shri Mahavir Tyagi : Fifteenth is the probable date on which you might
summon the session. What I want to know is how long will that session last.
Mr. President : I have answered that question. I have said, the session
will last from the day it commences up to the 15th of August, if my provisional
programme stands.
The Honourable Shri Ghanshyam Singh Gupta : May I also remind you, Sir,
that it will be difficult for us to say on what particular date we will finish.
That will depend on the work and how much time we take.
Mr. President : As I have said, this is a provisional suggestion of mine.
That is a good date and therefore I want to have it finish by the date. If the
Members want to prolong it, they can do it, of course.
Shri R. K. Sidhva : My point is, we have held over a number of clauses and
unless we meet a little earlier, viz., by the 20th, we will not be able
to finish the subject matters held over as contentious by the 15th August 1949.
Mr. President : I shall bear that in mind.
The Honourable Shri Satyanarayan Sinha : Sir, let us adjourn now.
Mr. President : Do I take it that the House accepts the motion moved by Mr.
Sinha?
Honourable Members : Yes.
Mr. President : The question is:
“Resolved
that the House do adjourn until such date in July 1949 as the President may
fix.”
The motion was adopted.
The Assembly then adjourned until a Date in July 1949 to be fixed by the
President.
-------------------------------------------------------------
*[Translation of Hindustani speech.]*
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