Rashid Masood(Congress) Member of the Rajya Sabha on Monday Oct 21,2013 became the
first MP to lose his seat after the Supreme Court struck down a
provision in the electoral law that protected a convicted lawmaker from
disqualification on the ground of pendency of appeal in higher courts
A notification issued by Secretary-General Shumsher K. Sheriff said that
“ … consequent upon his conviction on September 19, 2013, followed by
an award of sentence of four years’ rigorous imprisonment along with a
fine of Rs. 10,000/- … (sentences to run concurrently) Mr. Rasheed
Masood stands disqualified for being a Member of the Council of States
(Rajya Sabha) from the date of his conviction, i.e. the 19th day of
September, for the period of his sentence and shall continue to be
disqualified for a further period of six years since his release in
terms of the existing Section 8 of the Representation of the People Act,
1951 (43 of 1951) read with subclause (e) of clause (1) of the Article
102 of the Constitution.”
Note
Rashid Masood(66)was held guilty by a Special CBI judge under various Sections of the
Prevention of Corruption Act and the Indian Penal Code for fraudulently
nominating undeserving candidates to MBBS seats allocated to Tripura in
medical colleges from the Central pool. He was then Health Minister in
the V.P. Singh government between 1990 and 1991
Rashid Masood’s is the first disqualification after the apex court struck down
subsection 4 of the Representation of the People Act under which
incumbent legislators could avoid disqualification during the pendency
of their appeal against conviction in a higher court. The appeal had to
be made within three months of the conviction
SC Rules: Persons in lawful custody cannot contest polls Wednesday July 10,2013
The Supreme Court has held that persons in lawful custody — whether convicted in a criminal case or otherwise — cannot contest elections.
SC Rules: Persons in lawful custody cannot contest polls Wednesday July 10,2013
The Supreme Court has held that persons in lawful custody — whether convicted in a criminal case or otherwise — cannot contest elections.
The ruling, however, does not apply to those on bail.
A Bench of Justices A.K. Patnaik and S.J. Mukhopadhaya dismissed appeals
filed by the Chief Election Commissioner and others against a Patna
High Court judgment that in 2004 had held that when a person in custody
is disqualified from voting he or she must be disqualified from
contesting in elections too.
In its order, the Bench said: “We have heard counsel for the [political]
parties and we do not find any infirmity in the findings of the High
Court in the impugned common order that a person who has no right to
vote by virtue of the provisions of Section 62 (5) of the Representation
of the People Act 1951 is not an elector and is therefore not qualified
to contest the election to the House of the People or the Legislative
Assembly of a State.”
The Case
- Jan Chaukidar (Peoples Watch) and others filed petitions in the Patna High Court contending that a person, who was confined in prison, whether under a sentence of imprisonment, transportation or otherwise, or was in the lawful custody of the police was not entitled to vote by virtue of Section 62 (5) of the RP Act and accordingly was not an “elector” and was, therefore, not qualified to contest elections to the House of People or the Legislative Assembly of a State.
- The Patna High Court accepted this contention and held: “A right to vote is a statutory right, the Law gives it, the Law takes it away. Persons convicted of crime are kept away from elections to the Legislature, whether to State Legislature or Parliament and all other public elections. The Court has no hesitation in interpreting the Constitution and the Laws framed under it, read together, that persons in the lawful custody of the Police also will not be voters, in which case, they will neither be electors. The Law temporarily takes away the power of such persons to go anywhere near the election scene. To vote is a statutory right. It is [a] privilege to vote, which privilege may be taken away. In that case, the elector would not be qualified, even if his name is on the electoral rolls.”
- Aggrieved by the findings of the Patna High Court, the appellants filed the appeals and the Bench dismissed them and upheld the findings rendered by the High Court.
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