The new BJP government has made its intentions clear about removing several high-profile governors appointed by the previous UPA dispensation.
After the resignation of Uttar Pradesh Governor B. L. Joshi on Tuesday June 17,2014, at least 5 more Governors may have to go next.
Others who could be on their way out include K. Sankaranarayanan
(Maharashtra), Kamla Beniwal (Gujarat), M. K. Narayanan (West Bengal)
and Sheila Dikshit (Kerala)
Serving Governors appointed during UPA regime
Name
|
State
|
Since
|
H.R. Bhardwaj
|
Karnataka
|
June 2009
|
Jagannath Pahadia
|
Haryana
|
July 2009
|
J.B. Patnaik
|
Assam
|
November 2009
|
Kamla Beniwal
|
Gujarat
|
November 2009
|
Shivraj Patil
|
Punjab
|
January 2010
|
Urmila Singh
|
Himachal Pradesh
|
January 2010
|
E.S.L. Narasimhan
|
Andhra Pradesh; Telangana (additional charge since June 2, 2014)
|
January 2010
|
K. Sankaranarayanan
|
Maharashtra
|
January 2010
|
Vakkom Purushothaman
|
Mizoram
|
August 2011
|
K. Rosaiah
|
Tamil Nadu
|
August 2011
|
Ram Naresh Yadav
|
Madhya Pradesh
|
August 2011
|
Syed Ahmed
|
Jharkhand
|
September 2011
|
B.V. Wanchoo
|
Goa
|
April 2012
|
Margaret Alva
|
Rajasthan
|
May 2012
|
Aziz Quereshi
|
Uttarakhand
|
May 2012
|
D.Y. Patil
|
Bihar
|
March 2013
|
N.N. Vohra
|
Jammu and Kashmir
|
April 2013
|
Nirbhay Sharma
|
Arunachal Pradesh
|
May 2013
|
Shriniwas Dadasaheb Patil
|
Sikkim
|
July 2013
|
V.K. Duggal
|
Manipur
|
December 2013
|
Sheila Dikshit
|
Kerala
|
March 2014
|
The shunting out could trigger a legal
battle if any governor takes the legal recourse in view of the 2010
Supreme Court judgment that stated governors cannot be removed in a
"whimsical and arbitrary" manner.
Supreme Court ruling on removal of Governors
This
is not the first time that a Governor appointed by the Centre has quit
or has been asked to go after a change of government at the Centre.
The
situation is similar to that of 2004, when the UPA government was
dragged to the Supreme Court by the NDA government for asking governors
appointed by it to resign.
The SC had then ruled that governors could not be removed in an "arbitrary" manner.
Senior lawyer and constitutional expert KTS Tulsi said: "In
that case, in May 2010, the apex court ruled that though no reason
needed to be assigned for discontinuance, the power under Article 156
(1) cannot be exercised in an arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable
manner.
The SC specifically said the power will have to be exercised in
rare and exceptional circumstances for valid and compelling reasons."
Senior lawyer and constitutional expert KTS Tulsi said the court also emphasised that "a governor cannot be removed on
the ground that he is out of sync with the policies and ideologies of
the Union government or the party in power at the Centre. Nor can be
removed on the ground that the Centre has lost confidence in him.
It
follows therefore that change in government at the Centre is not a
ground for removal of governors holding office to make way for others
favoured by the new government."
The
SC in the case (B.P. Singhal vs Union of India) also said:
"If the
aggrieved person is able to demonstrate prima facie that his removal was
either arbitrary, malafide, capricious or whimsical, the court will
call upon the Union government to disclose to the court, the material
upon which the President had taken the decision to withdraw the
pleasure.
If the Centre does not disclose any reason, or if the reasons
disclosed are found to be irrelevant, arbitrary, whimsical, or malafide,
the court will interfere."
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