The Supreme Court on Tuesday referred a clutch of petitions revolving around the fall of Uddhav Thackeray's government and the formation of Eknath Shinde's government in Maharashtra to a five-judge constitution bench of the apex court.
The Supreme Court also directed the Election Commission not to pass any orders on Shinde faction's plea that it be considered the real Shiv Sena.
The Supreme Court on Tuesday referred a clutch of petitions revolving around the fall of Uddhav Thackeray's government and the formation of Eknath Shinde's government in Maharashtra to a five-judge constitution bench of the apex court.
The SC ordered the listing of the pleas before the bench on Thursday. It also directed the Election Commission not to pass any orders on Shinde faction's plea that it be considered the real Shiv Sena and granted the party's poll symbol.
A bench headed by Chief Justice NV Ramana said the batch of petitions raise important constitutional issues relating to the 10th schedule of the Constitution pertaining to disqualification, power of the Speaker and Governor, and judicial review. It said said the proposition of law laid down by the constitution bench in the Nabam Rebia case relating to 10th schedule stands on a contradictory reasoning which requires gap filling to uphold constitutional morality.
"The matters raise important issues which need consideration by a five-judge constitution bench. List the matter before the constitution bench the day after tomorrow and the bench will decide about the symbol related to the Election Commission proceeding at the beginning," said the bench, comprising CJI Ramana and Justices Krishna Murari and Hima Kohli.
The Tenth Schedule of the Constitution provides for the prevention of defection of the elected and nominated members from their political party and contains stringent provisions against defections.
The top court asked the constitution bench to look into the following constitutional issues:
The Uddhav faction of the Shiv Sena had earlier submitted that party MLAs loyal to Maharashtra Chief Minister Eknath Shinde can save themselves from disqualification under the Tenth Schedule of the Constitution only by merging with another political party.
The bench had asked the Shinde faction to redraft the legal issues of split, merger, defection and disqualification raised in petitions filed by the Uddhav camp that are to be adjudicated upon following the recent political crisis in Maharashtra.
The Shinde group had said the anti-defection law is not a weapon for a leader who has lost the confidence of his own party to lock his members and somehow hang on.
(With PTI inputs)