Here is the timeline of events in the 17 Karnataka MLAs disqualification matter in which the Supreme Court on Wednesday Nov 13,2019 upheld the then Speaker's order, but paved the way for the MLAs to contest the December 5 bypolls on 15 seats in the state
SCI upholds disqualification of Karnataka MLAs, but allows them to contest by-polls
Jul 6: Twelve MLAs from the Congress-JD(S) coalition submit
resignation leading to 13-month-old Karnataka government into crisis.
Jul 10: Ten rebel Congress and JD(S) MLAs move SC alleging Assembly
Speaker has deliberately not been accepting their resignations.
Jul 11: SC asks then-Speaker K R Ramesh Kumar to decide "forthwith" on
the resignation of 10 rebel Congress-JD(S) MLAs, allowed the lawmakers
to meet him at 6 pm. Speaker Ramesh Kumar moves SC against its order.
Jul 12: SC asks Assembly speaker to maintain status quo on the
resignation and disqualification of 10 MLAs.
July 15: Five more rebel Congress MLAs move SC seeking impleading along
with the pending petition of 10 legislators.
Jul 16: Speaker tells SC he would decide on both disqualification and
resignation of the rebel MLAs by Jul 17, requests court to modify its
earlier order directing him to maintain status quo. Then-Karnataka Chief
Minister H D Kumaraswamy tells SC it had no jurisdiction to pass the
two interim orders.
Jul 17: SC says 15 rebel MLAs "ought not" to be compelled to participate
in ongoing Assembly session, Speaker to decide on their resignation
within time-frame considered appropriate by him.
Jul 19: Karnataka Congress moves SC contending its order was coming in
way of party issuing whip to its legislators in the ongoing trust vote.
Jul 22: Congress-JD(S) government collapsed after confidence motion
moved by CM H D Kumaraswamy was defeated in the assembly.
Jul 25: Speaker disqualifies three MLAs under the anti-defection law.
Jul 26: Karnataka BJP stalwart B S Yediyurappa sworn in as CM for the
fourth time.
Jul 28: Speaker disqualifies 14 more MLAs under the anti-defection act
till the end of the current term of the assembly in 2023.
Jul 29: Yediyurappa proved majority in the Assembly. Two rebel Congress
leaders move SC against disqualification from Assembly.
Aug 1: 14 disqualified MLAs move SC challenging their disqualification.
Sep 17: SC judge Justice M M Shantanagoudar recuses from hearing pleas
filed by 17 disqualified MLAs challenging their disqualification.
Sep 23: SC agrees to hear plea of disqualified MLAs seeking to contest
bypolls for 15 Assembly seats in the state.
Oct 25: SC reserves verdict on a batch of petitions challenging
disqualification of 17 MLAs.
Nov 4: Karnataka Congress urges SC to take on record a fresh audio clip
in which Yediyurappa is purportedly hitting out at his party leaders for
not recognising the "sacrifice" of the disqualified Congress-JD(S)
MLAs, because of whom the BJP could come to power.
Nov 5: SC refuses to pass an order on Karnataka Congress' request.
Nov 8: Disqualified Karnataka MLAs move SC, seek further postponement of
Assembly bypolls scheduled for Dec 5.
Nov 13: SC upholds Speaker's decision of MLAs' disqualification but
allows them to contest Dec 5 bypolls.
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