Defections (political): India
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Contents |
History
The story of Gaya Lal
Ajay Sura, Oct 9, 2024: The Times of India
Chandigarh : The famous phrase “Aya Ram Gaya Ram” widely used across the country for politicians switching loyalties has its origin from Haryana and it was because of one person, ‘Gaya Lal,’ whose son Udai Bhan Singh is chief of Congress’ Haryana unit at present. It was actually Gurgaon MP Rao Inderjit Singh’s father and former Haryana CM, Rao Birender Singh who coined this term 57 years ago in 1967.
Haryana had its first elections for state assembly in 1967 and Congress dissident Gaya Lal had contested and won as an Independent candidate from Hasanpur (reserved), now Hodal seat in Faridabad. In that election, a total of 16 independent candidates had won. At that time, the United Front as well as the Congress were eying support of Independent MLAs to form government.
It was at that point Gaya Lal first joined the United Front but after a while, his heart changed, and he joined Congress. Again, within a few hours, he re-joined the United Front. With this, he switched his loyalty thrice in one day.
On Gaya Lal switching his loyalty for the third time, Rao Birender Singh, former Haryana CM (March 24, 1967 to Nov 2, 1967) who was heading United Front, presented him before the media in Chandigarh and said: “Jo Gaya Ram The, Wo Aaya Ram hao Gaye Hain” (The person who had left earlier has come back). It was after Rao Birender Singh’s announcement the phrase “Aya Ram Gaya Ram” became popular in politics, and was used for turncoats.
Although several other legislators or politicians in Haryana changed their loyalties many times in their political career until the antidefection law came into force, the maxim “Aya Ram Gaya Ram” is still linked with Gaya Lal. In 1972, Gaya Lal joined Arya Sabha and then jumped to Charan Singh’s Bhartiya Lok Dal. He also joined Janata party before contesting his last assembly election in 1982 as an independent candidate. After 1967 polls, Gaya Lal was elected again in 1977 for one more time. He died in 2009.
Interestingly, his son Udai Bhan, who is currently head of Haryana PCC, also faced charges under the anti-defection law for allegedly joining the Congress in 2004. At that time, he was an independent MLA from Hasanpur seat, having been elected in the 2000 state assembly elections.
During the poll campaign, Ashok Tanwar switched over to the Congress hours after being part of a BJP poll rally.
1967- 2020
Dhananjay Mahapatra, Does anti-defection law need an overhaul, March 16, 2020: The Times of India
The worrying factor for democracy is that MLAs are happily courting disqualification or tendering resignations for a better deal in [a] new dispensation.
The Tenth Schedule, inserted in the Constitution in 1985 after bitter experiences of governments falling prey to defections of MLAs, is silent on this new resignation formula to destabilise governments.
The 1960s and 1970s political arena was marked by ‘Aya Rams and Gaya Rams’, the coinage credited to Haryana MLA Gaya Lal who changed his loyalty to parties thrice in a short span of time in 1967. Haryana had two other stalwarts in the defection game — Rao Birendra Singh and Bhajan Lal.
Bhajan Lal in 1980 had defected to Congress after Indira Gandhi returned to power post-Emergency. He along with his ministers and MLAs merged with Congress to remain chief minister. Probably that made Parliament in March 1985 to insert Tenth Schedule, which then had validated defection of onethird of MLAs of a party and merger of one party with another if two-thirds of MLAs of the merging party favoured it.
The Tenth Schedule gave the Speaker of Lok Sabha and assemblies unquestionable power in deciding petitions seeking disqualification of MLAs under the anti-defection law. This was challenged in the Supreme Court, which by a slender 3-2 majority in Kihoto Hollohan case (1992 Supp (2) SCC 651) ruled that Speakers, while deciding petitions under anti-defection law, exercised judicial powers akin to a tribunal and hence their decisions would be subject to scrutiny of HCs and the SC.
Since then, the SC has been called upon numerous times to decide the validity of Speakers’ decisions under the antidefection law, which indicated rampancy of defection and Tenth Schedule’s limited deterrence effect.
Finding split and merger concessions in the Tenth Schedule getting exploited repeatedly, the NDA government under Atal Bihari Vajapayee through Parliament effected the 91st Constitutional Amendment in 2003, which prohibited defections through split and merger. It also capped the number of ministers in a government as experience showed that the carrot of ministerial berths to engineer defections led to jumbosized council of ministers.
With the anti-defection law plugging exit routes for MLAs and given the mind-boggling cost of re-election, it was hoped that there would be political stability in governance after exploration of opportunities for postpoll alliances between parties.
Penning the minority opinion in Kihoto Hollohan judgment, Justice J S Verma had noticed that under Articles 103 and 192, disqualification of MPs/ MLAs was to be decided by the President/governor after consulting the Election Commission. Finding that Tenth Schedule vested disqualification powers with the Speaker, he had raised doubts about the impartiality of Speaker.
“Speaker being an authority within the House and his tenure being dependent on the will of the majority therein, likelihood of suspicion of bias could not be ruled out. The question as to disqualification of a member has adjudicatory disposition and, therefore, requires the decision to be rendered in consonance with the scheme for adjudication of disputes,” the minority opinion had said. A similar view on erosion of traditional impartiality attached to Speaker was expressed by the SC through Justice N V Ramana in a recent judgment in the case relating to disqualification of Karnataka rebel MLAs.
The limitations of anti-defection law were evident from the fact that 17 MLAs, who resigned/were disqualified by the Speaker for anti-party activities, sought re-election and 11 of them got re-elected. Ten of them got ministerial berths in the B S Yediyurappa government that was formed after the H D Kumaraswamy government collapsed.
The SC in the Karnataka rebel MLAs case had said, “His (Speaker’s) political affiliations cannot come in the way of adjudication (of disqualification petitions)… There is a growing trend of Speakers acting against the constitutional duty of being neutral. Additionally, political parties are indulging in horse-trading and corrupt practices, due to which citizens are denied stable governments. In these circumstances, Parliament is required to reconsider strengthening certain aspects of the Tenth Schedule, so that such undemocratic practices are discouraged.”
Probably, the solution lies in creating an independent authority to deal with disqualification of MPs and MLAs under the Tenth Schedule. Justice Verma in Hollohan judgment had said, “Tenure of the Speaker, who is the authority in the Tenth Schedule to decide this dispute, is dependent on the continuous support of the majority in the House and, therefore, he does not satisfy the requirement of such an independent adjudicatory authority; and his choice as the sole arbiter in the matter violates an essential attribute of the basic feature.”
2014-2023: defections with benefits
Deeptiman Tiwary, April 4, 2024: The Indian Express
This is in sharp contrast to what happens when the accused is in the Opposition — an investigation by The Indian Express in 2022 revealed how 95 per cent of prominent politicians that the Enforcement Directorate (ED) and Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) took action against after 2014, when the NDA came to power, were from the Opposition.
- In the case of Ajit Pawar, the Mumbai Police’s Economic Offences Wing (EOW) filed a closure report in October 2020 when he was part of the previous MVA government, sought to reopen the case once the BJP returned to power, and closed the file again in March this year after he joined the NDA. The ED’s case against Pawar, based on the EOW action, has since been rendered infructuous.
- Then there are cases that remain open but just in name, with no notable progress. For instance, the CBI has been waiting since 2019 for sanction from the Lok Sabha Speaker to prosecute West Bengal Leader of Opposition Suvendu Adhikari – he was an MP at the time of the alleged offence — in the Narada sting operation case. Adhikari switched from TMC to BJP in 2020.
- The cases against Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma and former Maharashtra Chief Minister Ashok Chavan are also stuck. Biswa faced CBI questioning and raids in 2014, in the Saradha chit fund scam, but the case against him has not moved since 2015 when he joined the BJP. Chavan joined the BJP this year even as a stay by the Supreme Court is in place over proceedings by the CBI and ED in the Adarsh Housing case.
In just two of the 25 cases — of former Congress MP Jyoti Mirdha and former TDP MP YS Chowdary — there is no evidence of a let-up by the ED even after the two leaders joined the BJP. At least, not yet.
The CBI, ED and Income Tax Department did not respond to questions from The Indian Express seeking comments on the latest findings.
However, a CBI official said that all the agency’s probes are “based on evidence”. “As and when evidence is found, appropriate action is taken.” When asked about the cases where the agency seems to have changed course once the accused has changed parties, the official said: “In some cases, action is delayed for various reasons. But they are open.”
An ED official said its cases are based on FIRs by other agencies. “If other agencies close their case, it becomes difficult for ED to proceed further. Yet, we have filed chargesheets in many such cases. In cases where the probe is on, action will be taken when required,” the official said, when asked about the flip-flops.
Pawar, Patel, Adhikari, Sarma… how some cases were closed, others sent to cold storage
FROM closing the case to putting it in cold storage — this is how the Enforcement Directorate, CBI and IT Department changed course once the accused changed their party and moved over to the ruling BJP, reveals an investigation of the chronology of case records by The Indian Express.
Ajit Pawar: Mumbai probe shut, case hits dead end
Party Shift: NCP, shifted to BJP-led NDA in 2023
The Case: The Economic Offences Wing (EOW)’s FIR against Ajit Pawar, Sharad Pawar and others, in a case of money laundering linked to alleged irregularities in Maharashtra State Cooperative Bank, was based on a Bombay High Court order of August 2019. The ED’s probe that followed also named Congress leaders Jayant Patil, Diliprao Deshmukh and the late Madan Patil; NCP’s Ishwarlal Jain and Shiva ji Rao Nalawade; and Shiv Sena’s Anandrao Adsul.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
August 2019: Mumbai Police’s EOW registers FIR
September 2019: ED begins probe based on FIR
October 2020: EOW files closure report, ED challenges it
April 2022: ED files chargesheet without naming Pawar
June 2022: Sena splits, Shinde faction forms NDA govt with BJP
October 2022: Mumbai EOW seeks further probe based on ED evidence
July 2023: Pawar joins NDA govt as Dy CM
January 2024: EOW files second closure report
Current Status: ED has filed intervention application in court on EOW closure
Praful Patel: Safe landing after turbulence
Party Shift: NCP, shifted to BJP-led NDA in 2023
The Case: The former civil aviation minister is being probed by CBI and ED for alleged corruption in the purchase of 111 aircraft by Air India as well as in the AI-Indian Airlines merger. The allegations involve ceding of profitable routes to foreign airlines, opening of training institutes with foreign investment, and ties with lobbyist Deepak Talwar. The FIRs do not list Patel as an accused but mention his name.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
May 2017: CBI files FIRs in Air India-Indian Airlines merger
May 2019: ED names Patel in its chargesheet
June 2023: Patel joins NDA
March 2024: CBI files closure report
Current Status: Closure pending in court
Pratap Sarnaik: 2 yrs after SOS letter, case closed
Party Shift: Shiv Sena, shifted to BJP-led NDA in 2022
The Case: The Shiv Sena spokesperson was booked and raided by ED over alleged irregularities in his companies’ dealings with a security firm. In June 2021, Sarnaik wrote to then CM Uddhav Thackeray for a patch-up with BJP, citing “harassment” by ED. In June 2022, he sided with Eknath Shinde as the Sena split. The ED is also probing Sarnaik in a case of alleged fraud at the National Spot Exchange Limited (NSEL).
Chronology of Flip-Flop
November 2020: ED conducts raids based on Mumbai EOW’s FIR
January 2021: EOW files closure report
June 2022: Sarnaik joins NDA with Shinde
September 2022: Court accepts closure report, blunting ED case
Current Status: No further action, probe on in another case
CASES OPEN BUT IN COLD STORAGE
Himanta Biswa Sarma: At the helm after years under lens
Party Shift: Congress, joined BJP in 2015
The Case: Now Assam CM, he was investigated by CBI and ED in 2014 and 2015 for alleged financial transactions with key Saradha chit fund scam case accused Sudipta Sen. The CBI raided his house and office in 2014, and questioned him. His name had figured in the Louis Berger case linked to alleged bribes paid for water project contracts in Goa, but there has been no development.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
August 2014: CBI raids Sarma’s residence
November 2014: CBI questions him
August 2015: Joins BJP
Current Status: Case open but no action
Hasan Mushrif: How sugar probe turned
Party Shift: NCP, shifted to BJP-led NDA in 2023
The Case: The ED’s case relates to money laundering amid alleged irregularities at Sar Senapati Santaji Ghorpade Sugar Factory (SSSGSF) in Kolhapur, Maharashtra. The ED claimed that 40,000 farmers were not given share certificates after capital was collected from them. It alleged that the money collected was diverted to shell companies linked to Mushrif’s family and relatives.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
Feb-March 2023: ED raids Mushrif’s premises thrice
July 2023: Mushrif joins NDA with Ajit Pawar
Current Status: Case open but no further raids or action
Bhavana Gawali: Trust pays off in the end
Party Shift: Shiv Sena, joined BJP-led NDA in 2022
The Case: The ED raids were related to a 2020 money laundering case in which the Yavatmal-Washim MP and her aide are among those accused of allegedly siphoning funds from a trust where irregularities of upto Rs 17 crore were found. The ED also attached an office building in Mumbai worth Rs 3.75 crore allegedly linked to the aide Saeed Khan.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
August 2021: ED searches premises linked to her
September 2021: ED arrests her aide
November 2021: ED files chargesheet against Trust and aide
June 2022: Joins NDA with Shinde
Current Status: No supplementary chargesheet filed
Yamini & Yashwant Jadhav: Taxing times over as probe stalls
Party Shift: Shiv Sena, joined BJP-led NDA in 2022
The Case: MLA Yamini and her husband Yashwant, a corporator, are under investigation by multiple agencies, including ED. The ED is probing at least six companies allegedly linked to them and their family members for alleged violations of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA). A key case relates to unsecured loans received by the Jadhavs, their family members and others known to them from one of those companies. In 2022, the tax department attached more than 40 properties allegedly linked to them.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
February 2022: I-T raids premises linked to her and husband
May 2022: ED summons husband after registering case
June 2022: Joins NDA with Shinde
Current Status: No progress in case
C M Ramesh: Inaction after shift
Party Shift: TDP, joined BJP in 2019
The Case: In October 2018, the I-T department raided premises associated with the company of then TDP MP, alleging irregularities of Rs 100 crore. Incidentally, following the I-T raids, he was among those against whom BJP MP GVL Narasimha Rao wrote to the Parliament’s ethics committee seeking disqualification for earning the “dubious title of ‘Andhra Mallyas’ with massive financial scandals”.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
October 2018: Faces IT raid
June 2019: Joins BJP
Current Status: No action reported since
Raninder Singh: Under Amarinder’s shadow
Party Shift: Congress, son of Amarinder Singh who joined BJP in 2021
The Case: Raninder Singh, the son of former Punjab CM Captain Amarinder Singh, is being probed by ED for alleged FEMA violations linked to an I-T probe. He appeared before the ED in 2016. In March 2018, the CBI questioned Gurpal Singh, Amarinder Singh’s son-in-law over an alleged loan fraud of around Rs 98 crore by Simbhaoli Sugars, where Gurpal was deputy general manager. Based on the CBI FIR, the ED registered a money laundering case and attached mill assets of Rs 110 crore in July 2019.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
November 2020: Raninder questioned by ED
November 2021: Father Amarinder quits Congress
September 2022: Amarinder joins BJP
Current Status: No progress in case
Sanjay Seth: Case stalls, RS call
Party Shift: SP, joined BJP in 2019 The Case: In 2015, the I-T Department raided the offices of Shalimar Corp connected to Seth. Following UP Governor’s objection to Seth’s name for MLC polls, SP sent him to Rajya Sabha in 2016. Considered close to Mulayam Singh Yadav’s family, Seth is said to have been instrumental in forging the SP-BSP alliance in 2019. In the recent Rajya Sabha polls, Seth was BJP’s surprise pick.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
June 2015: I-T raids Seth’s company
August 2019: Joins BJP
July 2023: His group’s executive questioned
February 2024: BJP fields Seth from UP for Rajya Sabha
Current Status: Probe on but no action
BENGAL TO GOA, BIG-TICKET CASES
Suvendu Adhikari: File pending on Speaker’s desk
Party Shift: TMC, joined BJP in 2020
The Case: West Bengal Leader of Opposition is an accused in the Narada sting operation case along with 11 other TMC leaders. The sting operation — in which TMC leaders were purportedly captured on camera accepting or negotiating cash delivery to allegedly favour a fictitious company — was filmed in 2014 and aired in 2016 ahead of Assembly elections.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
April 2017: CBI FIR in Narada sting case
April 2019: CBI seeks sanction for prosecution from Lok Sabha Speaker—Adhikari was LS MP at the time of the offence
December 2020: Joins BJP
Current Status: Still waiting for sanction from Speaker
K Geetha: All eyes on CBI but no movement
Party Shift: YSRCP, joined BJP in 2019
The Case: YSRCP MP Geetha and her husband P Ramakoteswara Rao were chargesheeted in 2015 by CBI which accused their company Visweswara Infrastructure Pvt Ltd of duping Punjab National Bank by availing loans of Rs 42 crore through misrepresentation of facts, and defaulting. On March 12, the Telangana High Court stayed the conviction. On March 28, BJP named her as its candidate from Araku.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
June 2015: Geetha and husband chargesheeted by CBI for bank fraud
July 2019: Joins BJP
September 2022: Special court sentences both to 5 years jail
September 2022: Telangana HC stays sentence, grants bail
March 2024: Telangana HC stays conviction
Current Status: CBI yet to challenge HC stay
Sovan Chatterjee: Crackdown after jumping ship
Party Shift: TMC; joined BJP in 2018, quits in 2021
The Case: Former Kolkata Mayor and longtime TMC leader and MLA Sovan Chatterjee is a key accused in the Narada sting operation case and has been questioned by central agencies in the Saradha chit fund case too. After being denied a ticket from his traditional Behala Purba seat in 2021, Chatterjee resigned from BJP in March that year. In May 2021, the CBI arrested him in the Narada case. He is now out on bail.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
April 2017: CBI registers FIR in Narada sting case
November 2018: Resigns as Kolkata mayor
August 2019: Joins BJP
March 2021: Denied ticket for polls, quits BJP
May 2021: CBI arrests him
Current Status: Chargesheeted, case up for trial
Chhagan Bhujbal: Can travel abroad now, says ED
Party Shift: NCP, joined BJP-led NDA in 2023
The Case: Now Maharashtra minister, Bhujbal was booked by Maharashtra’s Anti-Corruption Bureau in 2015 in a case of alleged irregularities in award of contracts worth over Rs 100 crore in 2006 when he was PWD minister. Based on the FIR, ED registered a case of money laundering and arrested Bhujbal in March 2016. In May 2018, Bhujbal secured bail – and permission to travel abroad, which was challenged by ED at the time. Bhujbal went on to travel abroad even as ED’s plea remained pending for four years. With the court pointing this out, the ED withdrew its plea.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
March 2016: ED arrests Bhujbal in corruption case
April 2016: ED files chargesheet
May 2018: Gets bail after two-year jail
September 2021: Gets discharge in special court
July 2023: Joins NDA with Ajit Pawar
November 2023: Special court says case moving at “snails’s pace”
December 2023: ED withdraws petition challenging court permission for foreign travel
Current Status: Trial still on
Kripashankar Singh: Sons questioned
Party Shift: Congress, joined BJP in 2021
The Case: In 2012, then Mumbai Congress chief Krispashankar Singh was booked by police in a case of disproportionate assets. Based on the FIR, the ED began a money laundering probe, and questioned his sons.
Chronology of Flip-Flop bb
February 2012: Maharashtra police books Singh in assets case, ED case follows
December 2013: Police seek sanction to prosecute from Assembly Speaker
April 2015: Chargesheet, alleging Singh amassed assets of Rs 95 crore of which Rs 18 crore worth were disproportionate, filed without sanction
February 2018: Discharged by court for lack of sanction
September 2019: Resigns from Congress
July 2021: Joins BJP
Current Status: ED case rendered infructuous
Digambar Kamat: Water woes of a different kind
Party Shift: Congress, joined BJP in 2022
The Case: The former Goa Chief Minister has been facing an ED probe in the Louis Berger scam since 2015. The ED attached properties worth close to Rs 2 crore belonging to Kamat and NCP leader Churchill Alemao. In September 2022, Kamat led a group of eight Congress MLAs to the BJP.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
August 2015: ED searches house in Louis Berger case
March 2017: ED attaches assets
July 2021: Court frames charges
April 2022: SC upholds Bombay HC order setting aside ED attachment
September 2022: Kamat joins BJP
Current Status: Trial is on
UNDER SCANNER, SHIFTED THIS YEAR
Ashok Chavan: From housing scam to home in BJP
Party Shift: Congress, joined BJP in 2024
The Case: Former Maharashtra CM Ashok Chavan is among the key accused in the case related to allotment of flats in Adarsh Cooperative Housing Society, Mumbai. The CBI accused him of allegedly approving a raised floor space index in return for two flats for relatives. The ED initiated a money laundering probe on the CBI FIR, and questioned him.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
December 2011: CBI books Chavan in Adarsh Housing case
July 2012: CBI chargesheets Chavan
Jan 2018: SC stays proceedings
February 2024: Joins BJP
Current Status: Stay on trial
Naveen Jindal: All about coal
Party Shift: Congress, joined BJP in 2024
The Case: Haryana industrialist Naveen Jindal was chargesheeted by CBI in two separate coal block allocation cases in 2016 and 2017. The ED, which carried out a money laundering probe against him, also filed a chargesheet in the case. Charges have been framed in one of the cases. The ED raided the premises of Jindal Steel and Power and Navin Jindal in connection with a fresh case of alleged forex violation in April 2022.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
June 2013: CBI names Jindal in coal blocks FIR
2016/2017: Chargesheeted
April 2022: Faces ED raids in fresh case
March 2024: Joins BJP
Current Status: ED probe on
Tapas Roy: From case to candidate
Party Shift: TMC, joined BJP in 2024
The Case: The money laundering case is related to alleged irregularities in civic body recruitments. Roy is now the BJP candidate from Kolkata Uttar.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
January 2024: ED raids residence
March 2024: Joins BJP
Current Status: Probe on
Archana Patil: New party, no case
Party Shift: Congress, joined BJP in 2024
The Case: In April 2017, the I-T department raided premises of the N V Group where her husband, former Union minister and Congress leader Shivraj Patil’s son Shailesh Patil, is a director. Shailesh is Congress state secretary in Maharashtra. In February this year, the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) observed that nothing incriminating was found during the raid and so the I-T department could not make fresh tax demands. On March 30, Archana joined the BJP and is expected to contest from Latur.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
April 2017: Husband’s company raided by I-T
March 2024: Joins BJP
Current Status: I-T Tribunal says no case
Geeta Koda: Switch follows husband’s cases
Party Shift: Congress, joined BJP in 2024
The Case: Former Jharkhand CM Madhu Koda is under probe by central agencies with disproportionate assets and coal blocks allocation cases being key. Probes in other cases against Koda are at various stages.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
September 2012: CBI books husband Madhu Koda in coal blocks case
December 2014: CBI chargesheets Koda
December 2017: Koda is sentenced
January 2018: He gets stay on sentence
February 2024: Geeta switches from Congress to BJP
Current Status: Probe still on in other cases
Baba Siddiqui: Slum project brought ED to door
Party Shift: Congress, joined NCP and BJP-led NDA in 2024
The Case: In May 2017, ED conducted searches at premises associated with Mumbai Congress leader Baba Siddique in connection with a case of irregularities in a slum redevelopment project in the city. In 2018, ED also attached assets worth over Rs 450 crore of a developer involved in the case.
Chronology of Flip-Flop
May 2017: ED searches premises
February 2024: Joins Ajit Pawar’s NCP
Current Status: Probe on
WAITING TO BLINK
Jyoti Mirdha: Kin face more action
Party Shift: Congress, joined BJP in 2023
The Case: The ED is probing Indiabulls in multiple cases including the Yes Bank case, one related to alleged artificial inflation of share prices and a complaint by Shipra group of usurping its properties. Indiabulls promoter Sameer Gehlaut is the brother of Mirdha’s husband Narendra Gehlaut.
Chronology
March 2020: ED summons kin and Indiabulls promoter Sameer Gehlot in Yes Bank case
April 2021: ED books Indiabulls in another case of alleged inflated share prices
February 2022: ED raids Indiabulls premises
September 2022: Delhi HC quashes ED’s share prices case
October 2022: ED moves SC against HC order, does not get relief
April 2023: ED books Indiabulls in fresh case
September 2023: Jyoti Mirdha joins BJP
February 2024: ED raids Indiabulls
Current Status: Probe on
Sujana Chowdary: Chargesheet still in place
Party Shift: TDP, joined BJP in 2019
The Case: The former Union minister and ex-MP is being probed in three FIRs. These FIRs allege that Best and Crompton Engineering Projects Ltd (BCEPL) — which agencies claim belong to Chowdary — fraudulently obtained loans worth over Rs 360 crore from a consortium of banks and defaulted.
Chronology
April 2016: ED books firm allegedly linked to him
October 2018: ED raids Chowdary
April 2019: ED attaches Rs 315 crore worth assets
June 2019: Joins BJP, but chargesheeted
Current Status: Case committed to trial
The anti-defection law
Highlights
July 13, 2019: The Times of India
Karnataka political crisis: All about the anti-defection law
How anti-defection law came into force
- ‘Aaya Ram Gaya Ram’ was a phrase coined in 1967 after Haryana MLA, Gaya Lal, changed parties thrice in the same day.
- The anti-defection law sought to prevent such political defections which may be due to reward of office or similar consideration.
- The 10th Schedule was inserted in the Constitution in 1985 laying down the process by which legislators may be disqualified.
- A legislator is deemed to have defected if he either voluntarily gives up membership of his party or disobeys the directives of the party leadership on a vote.
When can a MLA be disqualified?
- If the member voluntarily gives up membership of the party on whose ticket s/he is elected.
- If the member votes or abstains from voting in the House contrary to any direction of his/her party.
- Disqualification may be avoided if the party leadership condones the vote or abstention within 15 days.
What happens if an MLA is disqualified?
- If a member of the current House (15th legislative assembly) is disqualified, it means s/he cannot contest any election to the 15th House. However, s/he can contest the next assembly election (to the 16th House). Also, Article 164 (1B) of the Constitution states a member who has been disqualified cannot be made a minister till the expiry of his or her term, or till s/he is re-elected.
- If an MLA is disqualified on conviction for certain offences, he will be disqualified for a period of six years under Section 8 of the Representation of People’s (RP) Act. But Section 8 (4) of the RP Act gives protection to MPs and MLAs as they can continue in office even after conviction if an appeal is filed within three months.
Time limit
The law does not specify a time-period for the presiding officer to decide on a disqualification plea.
Resignation vs disqualification
- If an MLA is disqualified, then s/he cannot be a minister in the new dispensation without being re-elected.
- However, if an MLA resigns s/he can be inducted as a minister and get elected to either House of the legislature within six months.
Some misconceptions clarified
PDT ACHARY, June 26, 2022: The Times of India
But a close reading of the original law on defection, namely the 10th Schedule of the Constitution, shows that there are provisions most people have conveniently forgotten about in their euphoria. It is therefore necessary to turn our attention to these key provisions of the law on defection which came into force in 1985. Under the 10th Schedule, if a member of a legislative house belonging to a party voluntarily gives up the membership of his or her party or votes against the whip issued by that party in the house, he or she is liable to be disqualified. But the law carved out two exceptions under which a member could escape disqualification. One exception was in relation to a split in the original political party, resulting in one third of the legislators moving out and forming a separate group. In such a situation that group was not liable to be disqualified. But because this exception was greatly misused by politicians (remember the ayaram-gayram culture), it was later removed by Parliament through an amendment. Even the first condition for a split, namely, that it has to occur in the original political party was ignored and the split in the legislature wing alone came to be counted. The second exception is with regard to merger. Under it, if a political party merges with another political party and two thirds of its legislators agree to such merger, they will not be disqualified. This is the exception which has been misused in all cases of defection that occurred during the past eight years or so. As had happened in the case of split, here too, the members take notice of only the number. They started acting on the assumption that all that is required under the law is for them to secure the two-third number and move out of their party. In all such cases, the Speakers who determine the defection cases, have, for obvious reasons, supported them. As it happened, all those legislators straightaway joined the ruling party. However, Para 4 of the 10th Schedule which contains this exception makes one thing clear. The merger shall be deemed to have taken place in the original political party only if not less than two thirds of the legislators agree to such a merger. The law is also clear on the point that the merger has to first take place between two original political parties. If no such merger takes place, the exception does not become applicable. However, in a recent judgment of Bombay High Court in Girish Chodankar vs Hon Speaker Goa legislative assembly, it was held that the merger of two-third of members of a legislature party with another party shall be deemed to be the merger of the original political parties. This judgment does not reflect the correct constitutional position as per the 10th Schedule. Nevertheless, the judgment too emphasises the fact that the two-thirds of the members of the legislature party have to merge with another party to escape disqualification. From this analysis of the legal provisions of the anti-defection law, two things become clear. One, the breakaway group of Sena rebels even with two-thirds of members cannot function as an independent group or party. Two, if there is no merger with the BJP or any other party, the exemption from disqualification does not apply and all become liable to be disqualified. The basic point of the 10th Schedule is to disqualify whoever leaves his party after being elected. It may be one member or it may be all the members. Of course, it is subject to the exception of merger.
The anti-defection law was enacted not to facilitate defection but to eliminate it. This is one cardinal fact which the legislators and the political class as a whole seem to have forgotten. That is the lesson the Maharashtra developments teach us once again. ■ The writer was secretary general, Lok Sabha
The law, its Infirmities the ‘merger’ clause
Sunil Baghel, July 2, 2022: The Times of India
There isn’t another piece of law that has been dissected as much as the anti-defection law in the past fortnight or so.
The reason, of course, was the Maharashtra political crisis, but all the hair-splitting has not yielded any great clarity on what this law has achieved.
The consensus seems to be that the anti-defection law has failed to establish what it set out to in 1985 despite an amendment aimed at strengthening it.
But before we dive into the infirmities plaguing the law and all the consequent confusion, a quick look at how it came into being:
The aaya Rams and gaya Rams
The aaya Rams and gaya Rams was a popular phrase used in the 1980s to describe politicians who would switch parties frequently. The Congress government decided to do something about it and provisions to prevent defections were introduced as the 10th Schedule in the Constitution in March 1985.
The law allowed a split in a political party only if one-third of its members wished to leave or two-thirds merged with another party. However, this failed to prove to be a deterrent and it was felt the provisions only encouraged defections.
Parliament passed the anti-defection law in 1985 to stop rampant party-hopping
The Law Commission in its 170th report on electoral reforms in May 1999 recommended amendment to the 10th Schedule. A fairly strongly worded section of the report said both provisions — one-third split or two-third merger with another party — be done away with.
What the Law Commission essentially wanted was that once elected from a particular political party, the elected representative should fight out his/her differences within the party and remain with that party till the end of the term or else quit the party and resign from the membership of the House.
Here’s an important excerpt from this report:
1. Freedom of speech is undoubtedly precious but when a person becomes a member of the political party, accepts its ticket and fights and succeeds on that ticket, he renders himself subject to the discipline and control of the party.
2. It should also be noticed that when a person applies for the ticket of a political party, he knows, and is expected to know, about the leadership, internal working, policies and programmes of the party. He must also reckon with the fact that in future, the leadership may change, policies and programmes may change and so on. If he, with his eyes open, applies for and obtains the ticket and contests and wins on that basis, he cannot plead later that he does not agree with the leadership or policies of the party.
3. Any difference of opinion, he must ventilate and fight within the party. The membership of the House does not become his private property nor can he trade in it. The Parliament, however, accepted only one part of the recommendations and let the two-thirds members leaving to merge with another party remain in an amendment in 2003. It is this ‘merger’ provision that is causing all kinds of confusion.
What exactly is the ‘merger’ clause?
This is how the ‘merger’ clause is described in the anti-defection law:
1. Member of a House shall not be disqualified where his original political party merges with another political party and he claims that he has either become a member of such other political party or a new political party formed by the merger.
2. The provision then says that the merger of the “original political party” with another would deemed to have taken place only if at least two-thirds of the members of the legislature party concerned have agreed to it. It is the term “original political party” that is at the centre of all the confusion.
How this ‘original political party’ clause applies to Maharashtra
For the rebels led by Eknath Shinde to be able to merge with a political party, they have to be the “original Shiv Sena” and not a splinter group of the party.
But the part of Shiv Sena loyal to Uddhav Thackeray is unlikely to give up its claim to being the “original Shiv Sena". Eknath Shinde's group has laid claim to be recognised as the original Shiv Sena
The rebels, in fact, at one point had indicated — though no formal declaration to this effect made — that they wanted to be called ‘Shiv Sena Balasaheb’.
So, if the Shinde group fails to be recognised as the “original Shiv Sena”, will they face disqualification?
Legislative wing of a party is just a small part of it
Several experts are of the opinion that a distinction must be made between a party and its legislative group.
To apply this distinction to the Maharashtra crisis: the legislative wing of the Shiv Sena has split, not the party.
A party, according to experts, encompasses a lot more than its legislators — it may have presence in municipal corporations, in district administrations (zilla parishads), and even in panchayats. Also, experts believe, a party is more than the sum of its elected representatives — it has workers, office-bearers, affiliated organisations, real estate, etc.
Does a split in its legislative wing lead to a split across the entire party? If it does, who gets to adjudicate such a split in terms of who gets what?
What have the courts said?
The only relevant court intervention that can be viewed as a clarification is a Bombay high court order on what happened in Goa in 2019, when 10 out of 15 Congress MLAs joined the BJP soon after the elections. This judgment passed by a division bench in February said the merger of two-thirds of members of a legislative group of a party with another party would be considered as the merger of ‘the original party'.
Uddhav Thackeray faces a battle in hanging on to the party name and symbol
This judgment has since been challenged before the SC and is pending adjudication, which means whether the view taken by the Bombay HC at Goa is correct or not is yet to be ascertained. The order, of course, does not go into the implications of ‘the original party’ merging with another party. In the sense the Congress remains a party in Goa.
To use the example of the Maharashtra crisis again, if Shinde now leads the ‘original Shiv Sena’, what is the Sena that Uddhav still leads? And if Shinde’s group is now the ‘original Shiv Sena’, can it lay claim to the ‘bow and arrow’ election symbol?
There are many other questions that need answers. And till we have the answers, the anti-defection law will continue to confound everyone.
Shiv Sena’s disqualification case
The Uddhav Thackeray faction Shiv Sena’s chief whip Sunil Prabhu has filed a petition before the deputy speaker of Maharashtra assembly invoking the 10th Schedule and seeking disqualification of 16 rebellion MLAs, including the current Chief Minister Eknath Shinde.
The petition states that the 16 MLAs have voluntarily given up the membership of Shiv Sena by their conduct of not attending meetings of the Shiv Sena Legislature Party called on June 21 and June 22 and have been acting in cahoots with the BJP to topple the MVA government.
Acting on this petition, the deputy speaker had issued notices to the rebel MLAs seeking a response within 48 hours of issuance of the notice. Eknath Shinde has challenged this notice before the SC, in which the vacation bench extended the response time for the MLAs to July 12 and kept the hearing of the case on July 11. On Friday, seeking an urgent hearing before the Supreme Court on behalf of Sunil Prabhu, Senior Advocate Kapil Sibal sought suspension of the 39 rebel Sena MLAs, including chief minister Eknath Shinde, from taking part on the trust vote for the new government in the Assembly.
Sibal mentioned the merger clause during the hearing and said that the rebels had fallen afoul of the Tenth Schedule. He submitted that the problem that faces the Assembly was that there was no merger (of the Shinde faction with BJP) as per the Tenth Schedule. He argued, “The moment Shinde was sworn in as CM, he violated Paragraph 2(1) (a) of the Tenth Schedule (voluntarily giving up membership of a party on whose ticket he/she is elected to Assembly)”.
He added that the Shinde faction is not the party and who is the real Shiv Sena could only be decided by the Election Commission after due scrutiny of claims made by the factions.
Prabhu can file a further application seeking disqualification of all the rebel MLAs. But even if the application remains the way it is, seeking disqualification of Eknath Shinde is the most crucial part and the verdict can have serious repercussions for the current government. Shinde, in case he is disqualified, can’t hold any ministry in the government and therefore he will have to resign from the post of Chief Minister of the State which can have a spiralling impact. A few of them being – automatic resignation of the entire cabinet; another round of political drama on who will be the CM; will the BJP continue to remain the junior partner, so on and so forth.
SC, 2019: discretion of Speaker should not be fettered
Dhananjay Mahapatra & Amit Anand Choudhary, July 18, 2019: The Times of India
Though the SC will decide later the key question of if rebel Karnataka MLAs have submitted their resignations prior to initiation of disqualification proceedings, it feels an interim order is urgently needed given the involvement of competing rights of parties in the litigation. “In these circumstances, the competing claims have to be balanced by an appropriate interim order, which according to us, should be to permit the speaker of the House to decide on the request for resignations by the 15 members of the House within such timeframe as the speaker may consider appropriate,”the SC said.
“We also take the view that in the present case, the discretion of the Speaker while deciding the above issue should not be fettered by any direction or observation of this court and the Speaker should be left free to decide the issue in accordance with Article 190 (of the Constitution)... The order of the speaker on the resignation issue, as and when passed, be placed before the court.”
The bench clarified, “Until further orders, the 15 members of the assembly ought not to be compelled to participate in the proceedings of the ongoing session of the House and an option should be given to them that they can take part in the said proceedings or opt to remain out of the same.” The order puts the ruling coalition in a quandary as it dispels the coercive element in the disqualification proceedings initiated by the speaker which could have annulled the effect of resignation of the 15 MLAs that reduces the ruling side to a minority.
Court judgements
1967-2014
Dhananjay Mahapatra, July 22, 2019: The Times of India
The seeds of legislators being allured to switch loyalties were sown in Indian politics in 1967. In half a century, the phenomenon has come to suffocate politics. It reminds one of what 19th century French diplomat, political scientist and historian Alexis de Tocqueville had prophesied for America: “There are many men of principle in both parties in America, but there is no party of principle.”
Till the 1960s and before its split, Congress was the rotund pillar of multi-party politics, inheriting the people’s goodwill for its contribution to the freedom struggle. In 1967, as many as 16 states went to polls. Congress could not cross the majority mark in eight and began a culture of throwing baits for migratory legislators to defect.
During 1967-71, there were 142 defections in Parliament and 1,969 cases of shifting of loyalty by MLAs in assemblies. As many as 32 governments collapsed because of defections and 212 defectors were rewarded with ministerial positions (source: PRS Legislative Research).
Defections felled the first government in Haryana headed by Bhagwat Dayal Sharma. Congress defector Rao Birender Singh became chief minister in a coalition government formed by rebel Congress MLAs with the help of opposition parties. MLA Gaya Lal took ‘swinging loyalty’ to new heights by defecting thrice in a fortnight and political analyst coined the phrase ‘Aya Ram, Gaya Ram’. Half a century later, the nomenclature has changed to ‘horse-trading’.
Defections have always given a handle to governors to poorly camouflage their whimsical decisions as constitutional duties to topple governments. Such actions of governors have been the basis of many memorable Supreme Court judgments — Kihoto Hollohan [1992 Supp (2) SCC 651], S R Bommai [1994 (3) SCC 1] and Rameshwar Prasad [2006 (2) SCC 1].
Though the SC always faulted governors’ actions in lending unconstitutional help in toppling of governments, it steadfastly refused to enter the ‘political thicket’ to determine what constituted ‘horse-trading’ or defections due to allurement. And, this probably emboldened ‘political pendulum’ MLAs to continue with impunity what their predecessors had done in the past.
In the Bommai case, the SC had said, “There cannot be any presumption of allurement or horse-trading only for the reason that some MLAs expressed the view which was opposed to the public posture of their leader and decided to support formation of government by the leader of another political party. Minority governments are not unknown. It is also not unknown that the governor, in a given circumstance, may not accept the claim to form the government, if satisfied that the party or the group staking claim would not be able to provide to the state a stable government. It is also not unknown that despite various differences of perception, the party, group or MLAs may still not opt to take a step which may lead to fall of the government for various reasons including their being not prepared to face the elections. These and many other imponderables can result in MLAs belonging to even different political parties to come together. It does not necessarily lead to assumption of allurement and horse-trading.”
As the SC did not, and could not, lay down what constitutes horse-trading, some leaders of political parties continued to do what they were best at — identify MLAs in rival political parties and lure them with money or ministerial berths. Should defectors and those with criminal antecedents deserve a berth in the council of ministers? The SC in Manoj Narula judgment [2014 (9) SCC 1] had said, “Democratic values survive and become successful where the people at large and the persons-in-charge of the institution are strictly guided by constitutional parameters without paving the path of deviancy and reflecting in action the primary concern to maintain institutional integrity and the requisite constitutional restraints.
“It can always be legitimately expected, regard being had to the role of a minister in the council of ministers and keeping in view the sanctity of oath he takes, the prime minister (or chief minister), while living up to the trust reposed in him, would consider not choosing a person with criminal antecedents against whom charges have been framed for heinous or serious criminal offences or charges of corruption to become a minister of the council of ministers. This is what the Constitution suggests and that is the constitutional expectation from the prime minister. Rest has to be left to the wisdom of the prime minister.”
MLAs who accept bribes to switch loyalty know that they, as public servants, are committing a crime under the Prevention of Corruption Act. Leaders who offer bribes to MLAs are also aware of their crime under the PC Act. And yet, leaders do not flinch in offering ministerial posts to defectors.
The fourth president of the US, James Madison, had once said, “If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to gover n men, neither exter nal nor internal controls on government would be necessary. In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself. A dependence on the people is, no doubt, the primary control on the government; but experience has taught mankind the necessity of auxiliary precautions.”
India’s first president Rajendra Prasad had agreed with B R Ambedkar to say this on November 26, 1949, “Whatever the Constitution may or may not provide, the welfare of the country will depend upon the way in which the country is administered. That will depend upon the men who administer it.”
The Karnataka political imbroglio, caused by ever familiar defections, offers an opportunity to the SC to think of auxiliary remedial measures, in addition to the antidefection law in the Tenth Schedule of Constitution, to maintain polity’s purity.
2019: SC on the rebel Congress-JD(S) MLAs of Karnataka
Dhananjay Mahapatra, Nov 14, 2019: The Times of India

From: Dhananjay Mahapatra, Nov 14, 2019: The Times of India
The Supreme Court upheld the Karnataka assembly speaker’s July decision to disqualify 17 rebel Congress-JD(S) MLAs, who brought down the H D Kumaraswamy government, but allowed them to contest bypolls from constituencies that fell vacant after their disqualification.
The unanimous verdict by a bench of Justices N V Ramana, Sanjiv Khanna and Krishna Murari, a rare judicial occurrence that pleased both sides, will have an important bearing on 15 bypolls and on whether the BJP government will acquire a majority in the 224-strong assembly. It enjoys the support of 106 MLAs and will be required to win six of the seats to have a majority.
Rejecting the contention of the disqualified MLAs that their resignations inoculated them from the disqualification provided for under the anti-defection law, it said: “We do not agree with the submission of the petitioners that the disqualification proceedings cannot be continued if the resignations are tendered. Even if the resignation is tendered, the act resulting in disqualification arising prior to the resignation does not come to an end. The pending or impending disqualification action in the present case would not have been impacted by the submission of the resignation letter, considering the fact that the acts of disqualification in this case have arisen prior to the members resigning from the assembly.”
On the interplay of defection, resignation and disqualification which involved the case, the bench said, “There is no doubt the disqualification relates to the date when such act of defection takes place. The tendering of resignation does not have a bearing on the jurisdiction of the speaker.... the taint of disqualification does not vaporise on resignation, provided the defection has happened prior to the date of resignation.” It said the speaker does not have the power to either indicate the period for which a person is disqualified.
See also
The Constitution of India (issues)