What is Defection?
- Political defection refers to a legislator elected on one party’s ticket switching loyalty to another party.
- Often driven by personal gain (ministerial positions, rewards).
- Undermines electoral mandate and destabilizes governments.
What is the Anti-Defection Law (ADL)?
- A legal framework to prevent political defections and ensure party discipline.
- Provides disqualification of MPs/MLAs for violating party directions or switching parties.
- Enacted through 52nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1985, adding the Tenth Schedule.
Constitutional Provisions
- 52nd Amendment Act, 1985:
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- Added the Tenth Schedule.
- Amended Articles 101, 102, 190, 191 (vacation and disqualification of seats).
- 91st Amendment Act, 2003:
- Capped the size of Councils of Ministers at 15% of House strength.
- Disqualified defectors from being appointed as ministers or to any remunerative political post.
- Removed protection for one-third split in the legislature.
Provisions under the Tenth Schedule
- Grounds for Disqualification:
- For MPs/MLAs from Political Parties:
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- Voluntarily giving up membership.
- Voting/abstaining against party direction without prior permission (unless condoned within 15 days).
- For Independent Members:
- Joining a political party after election leads to disqualification.
- For Nominated Members:
- Can join a party within 6 months of taking seat; after that, joining leads to disqualification.
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- Exceptions:
- Merger Clause: No disqualification if 2/3 of party members merge with another party.
- Presiding Officers: Exempted if they resign from the party upon being elected as Speaker/Chairperson.
Deciding Authority
- Presiding Officer (Speaker/Chairman) decides disqualification cases.
- No time limit specified for decision.
- Subject to Judicial Review:
- Kihoto Hollohan v. Zachillhu (1992): SC upheld judicial review and clarified that Speaker acts as a tribunal in such matters.
- Kihoto Hollohan v. Zachillhu (1992): SC upheld judicial review and clarified that Speaker acts as a tribunal in such matters.
Rule-Making Powers
- Presiding Officer can frame rules for implementing the Tenth Schedule.
- Rules must be tabled before the House for 30 days.
- Breach of rules can be treated as breach of privilege.
- Complaint must be received from another member.
- Accused member is entitled to explain before action is taken.
- Case can be referred to Committee of Privileges.
Advantages of ADL
- Curbs political opportunism and corruption.
- Enhances political stability and party discipline.
- Legally recognizes role of political parties.
- Facilitates mergers but discourages random individual defection.
- Reduces cost and frequency of mid-term elections.
Criticisms of ADL
- Suppresses legitimate dissent; treats disagreement as disloyalty.
- Encourages party dictatorship; limits freedom of conscience.
- Allows group defection (merger) but not individual—irrational distinction.
- Discriminates between independent and nominated members.
- Vests decision in Presiding Officer—often politically biased, legally untrained.
Conclusion
- ADL has brought stability but is seen as an anti-democratic tool at times.
- Needs reform to:
- Differentiate between defection and dissent.
- Ensure neutral adjudication (e.g., by an independent tribunal or EC).
- As democracy evolves, the ADL must balance party discipline with individual freedom and accountability.

