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Inner-Party Democracy And Anti-Defection Reform

Context
  • The article examines the anti-defection law, the legal distinction between a political party and legislature party, and the need to strengthen internal democracy within political parties.
  • Source: Raghav Chadha and six MPs split with AAP underlines urgency of strengthening inner-party democracy, The Indian Express, April 25, 2026

Anti-Defection Law and Merger Question

  • Tenth Schedule: Bars legislators from switching party loyalty through voting against party direction or through conduct outside the House.
  • Merger Defence: Defectors may claim protection if two-thirds or more legislators of that House merge with another political party.
  • Core Legal Issue: The unresolved question is whether a legislature-party merger is valid without the original political party also merging.

Political Party and Legislature Party

  • Supreme Court Clarification: In Subhash Desai vs Principal Secretary, Governor of Maharashtra, 2023, the Supreme Court distinguished between the political party and the legislature party.
  • Whip and Legislature Leader: The Court held that only the political party can appoint the legislature-party leader and whip.
  • Earlier Split Logic: In Rajendra Singh Rana vs Swami Prasad Maurya, 2007, courts held that a legislature-party split had to be linked to a split in the original political party.
  • Merger Debate: Similar reasoning may apply to merger provisions because of the similarity between the earlier split provision and the present merger provision in the Tenth Schedule.

Weak Regulation of Political Parties

  • ECI’s Constitutional Role: The Election Commission of India derives its power of superintendence, direction and control of elections from Article 324.
  • Registration Power: Section 29A of the Representation of the People Act, 1950 gives the ECI power to register political parties.
  • Deregistration Limitation: In Indian National Congress (I) vs Institute of Social Welfare, 2002, the Supreme Court held that the ECI cannot deregister a party for violating the Constitution or breaching the undertaking given at registration.
  • Regulatory Gap: The ECI can register political parties but lacks effective power to enforce internal democracy or deregister non-compliant parties.

Need for Mandatory Party Constitutions

  • Existing Gap: Out of more than 2,500 registered parties, the Election Commission website shows constitutions of only 34 parties.
  • Mandatory Constitution: Every political party should have a constitution beyond the basic registration requirement under Section 29A.
  • Required Procedures: Party constitutions should specify the relation between political party and legislature party, appointment of whip, removal and suspension of members, leadership challenges and member participation in leadership questions.
  • ECI Enforcement: The ECI should be empowered to suspend registration or deregister parties for non-compliance with basic requirements.

Internal Democracy as Anti-Defection Reform

  • Dissent Mechanism: Internal democracy can provide legitimate channels for dissent and leadership change.
  • Institutional Protection: Clear internal procedures can prevent party break-up through covert defections and factional manipulation.
  • Leadership Disputes: Internal arbitration can reduce dependence on prolonged ECI-led quasi-judicial processes.
  • Structural Problem: Many parties function as individual-led or family-led enterprises rather than institutions.

Reform References

  • Law Commission: The 170th Law Commission Report recommended adding Part IVC to the Representation of the People Act to regulate the internal functioning of political parties.
  • Draft Bill: A committee of former judges, bureaucrats and lawyers drafted the Political Parties Registration and Regulation of Affairs Bill.
  • Comparative Context: European party laws show that internal party democracy can be legally regulated, including member participation in leadership, right to dissent and internal arbitration bodies.
  • Reform Proposal: Mandatory party constitution and stronger ECI power to suspend or deregister non-compliant parties.

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