Is India’s Anti-Defection Law Failing Democracy?

Syllabus: Parliament and State legislatures

Context: Supreme Court warned Telangana Speaker of “gross contempt” for delaying decision on disqualification petitions against 10 BRS MLAs who defected to Congress.

Anti-Defection Law

  • Background and Evolution
    • Frequent political defections in the 1950s–60s created instability, symbolised by the phrase “Aaya Ram, Gaya Ram.”
    • To address this, the Anti-Defection Law was introduced through the 52nd Constitutional Amendment, 1985, adding the Tenth Schedule.
    • It aimed to curb defections motivated by personal gain, applying to Parliament and State Assemblies.
    • The 91st Constitutional Amendment Act, 2003 removed the one-third split provision, permitted mergers only with two-thirds support, and barred defectors from holding ministerial or paid political posts until re-elected.
  • Grounds for Disqualification
    • A member is disqualified for voluntarily giving up party membership, inferred from conduct.
    • Voting or abstaining against the party whip invites disqualification.
    • An independent member joining a political party faces disqualification.
    • A nominated member joining a party after six months also faces disqualification.
  • Role of the Presiding Officer
    • Disqualification cases are decided by the Speaker or Chairman, whose neutrality has been frequently questioned.
  • Exceptions
    • No disqualification if two-thirds members support a merger with another party.
    • Speaker/Chairman/Deputy Chairman may resign from their party to remain neutral without disqualification.

Criticisms of the Anti-Defection Law

  • Democratic and Institutional Concerns
    • The law imposes a curb on dissent, preventing lawmakers from voting by conscience.
    • Party leadership uses the whip to suppress internal debate.
    • Speaker’s bias and delays undermine neutrality since there is no fixed time limit for decisions.
  • Structural Weaknesses
    • The two-thirds merger provision encourages horse-trading and unethical political bargaining.
    • Opaque communication of party whips leads to disputes on whether legislators received due notice.

Supreme Court’s Stance

  • Ensuring Timeliness and Neutrality
    • In Keisham Meghachandra Singh (2020), the SC directed that defection cases be decided within three months, and suggested an independent tribunal for neutrality.
    • In Ravi S. Naik (1994), the SC held that the Speaker must act as a neutral adjudicator, and defections may be inferred without a formal resignation.
    • In Kihoto Hollohan (1992), the SC allowed judicial review of the Speaker’s decisions for mala fides or constitutional violations.
    • In Padi Kaushik Reddy (2025), the SC urged Parliament to reform the law and reconsider the Speaker’s role.

Way Forward

  • Restrict disqualification to votes affecting government stability, such as confidence motions or budget votes.
  • Transfer adjudication power to an independent body like the Election Commission, as suggested by ARC.
  • Establish a clear statutory time limit to prevent strategic delays.
  • Improve intra-party democracy, as recommended by the 170th Law Commission Report.
  • Ensure transparency in whips by mandating public and digital notification.
  • Strengthen enforcement through time-bound, transparent procedures, as proposed by several committees, including Dinesh Goswami (1990) and Halim Committee (1994).

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