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All in a bid to save Sonia Gandhi March 28, 2006 Let me begin by asking a few questions. Is it or is it not Parliament's business to discuss a Witness Protection Bill? Is it or is it not Parliament's business to discuss the Old Persons Bill? Is it or is it not Parliament's business to discuss the Communal Violence Bill? Alas for Jessica Lall, Priyadarshini Mattoo, and all those denied justice, the United Progressive Alliance now believes that there is nothing for Parliament to do but adjourn and go for a nice long summer break. And all in a bid to save Sonia Gandhi the embarrassment of explaining to the Election Commission why she should not lose her Lok Sabha seat under the Offices of Profit Act; now that Parliament is not in session, the road is free to an ordinance! Sonia Gandhi resigns: The Complete Coverage Sonia Gandhi could have been saved the blushes had her dirty tricks department not been so hyperactive. Some Congress worker filed a suit against Jaya Bachchan, to push that lady out of the Rajya Sabha. That has now boomeranged on Sonia Gandhi and certain others of her acolytes. Now, the Congress wants to legitimise laws that can take effect retrospectively. Do they realise how this can affect them? Sonia quitting: Much ado about nothing (As an aside, it wasn't just the monarchs who used this method of open bribery. Private firms followed the same practice. It might interest readers to know that one of the most notorious practitioners was the East India Company. Its interventions were so blatant that an angry William Pitt got Parliament to pass the India Act which brought the company under the crown.)This history of 'patronage' -- a polite name for 'bribery' -- was known to the men and women who drafted the Constitution of India. That is why they inserted Article 102 which specifically bars legislators from holding offices of profit. But it was only the Parliament (Prevention of Disqualification) Act of 1959 that defined just what were offices of profit -- ministership and chairing specific committees being outside the gambit of Article 102. The Uttar Pradesh Film Development Corporation was not on the list -- which led to Jaya Bachchan losing her Rajya Sabha seat. But nor is the National Advisory Council -- and that could put Sonia Gandhi in the hot seat. (Frankly, I am not sure if the National Advisory Council is an 'office of profit' in any event. But the Congress has made it one in the popular mind thanks to its panic. If you ask me, the best thing that Sonia Gandhi could do under the circumstances is to take the high moral ground and resign. I am absolutely certain that she will be re-elected from Rae Bareli by a landslide.) But let us not restrict the debate to Sonia Gandhi. The correct response is to lay down binding criteria defining the concept of 'office of profit'. Otherwise you could end up with absurdities such as one I recall from 1990. V P Singh, then prime minister, made Ramakrishna Hegde the deputy chairman of the Planning Commission. The order was signed by the Cabinet Secretary. Subramanian Swamy appealed to the Election Commission, and the Chief Election Commissioner upheld him. Ironically, both orders were issued by the same man, first in his avatar as Cabinet Secretary and later in his post-retirement avatar as Chief Election Commissioner -- T N Seshan. Sonia's decision a welcome trend Parliament amended the law in 1993, stipulating that a seat in the Planning Commission at any rate was not an office of profit. But are you going to have a situation where the Disqualification Act is going to be amended in every single session? Given the new offices being created every second day by politicians, what other option is there? I understand that no less than 44 MPs may come under the axe if the stringent conditions used to unseat Jaya Bachchan are applied to them. If Parliament cannot accept the authority of the judiciary in disqualifying MPs, what sense does it make to appear before the Election Commission? T V R Shenoy
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