Rajasthan political crisis: Governor listening to his masters' voices, says Congress : The Tribune India

Join Whatsapp Channel

Rajasthan political crisis: Governor listening to his masters' voices, says Congress

Accuses Kalraj Mishra of acting in a partisan way

Rajasthan political crisis: Governor listening to his masters' voices, says Congress

Governor Kalraj Mishra interacts with the Congress MLAs who accompanied Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot to the Raj Bhawan demanding from the Governor to convene an urgent Assembly session, in Jaipur, on July 24, 2020. PTI



New Delhi, July 26

Amid the political crisis in Rajasthan, the Congress on Sunday sought to keep up the pressure on Governor Kalraj Mishra and accused him of acting in a partisan way and listening what it dubbed as voices of his masters at the Centre.

"The Governors are bound to function with the aid and advice of the state government (council of ministers) but he is listening to his masters' voice, that is from the government at the Centre," party spokesperson Abhishek Manu Singhvi said while addressing a press conference here.

The Governor is facing a flak from the Congress for not acceding to the state government's request to convene a special Assembly session to enable Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot prove his majority on the floor of the House in the wake of rebellion by Sachin Pilot and 18 other Congress MLAs over leadership issue.

The Governor maintained on Friday that no one was above the constitutional decorum.

Singhvi added: "Constitutional authorities -- be it the Governors, courts or central government -- are supposed to not only know their constitutional roles and boundaries but to scrupulously follow them in letter and spirit and promote the true intent of the framers of the Constitution." The Supreme Court lawyer said that court cases pending in the Rajasthan High court and the Supreme Court on the issue have nothing to do with the convening of the Assembly session in the state.

"Consider the following questions which arise in that regard, qua the conduct of high persons and institutions like the Governor or the central government.

"Is it commonsensically conceivable that any Governor ever should refuse or delay the holding of a floor test, which truly determines who has the numbers and objections/ queries, intended to delay and postpone the floor test, and not let the cat out of the bag as to who really has the numbers?" the Congress leader said.

"Is the Governor and his diverse advisers who have generated such queries not aware of established jurisprudence -- from the Constituent Assembly to diverse SC judgments -- that unequivocally establish that the Governor is powerless and without jurisdiction in matters where he is advised by the state Cabinet?" The Congress spokesperson cited many legal cases in support of his contention that the government has the power to call an Assembly session, apart from debates in the Constituent Assembly.

Singhvi quoted the Sarkaria commission report, saying that "the Governor should not risk determining the issue of majority support, on his own, outside the Assembly. The prudent course for him would be to cause the rival claims to be tested on the floor of the House." — IANS


Top News

Congress nominee's ‘Constitution forced on Goa’ remarks invite PM’s ire; BJP files complaint

Congress nominee's ‘Constitution forced on Goa’ remarks invite PM’s ire; BJP files complaint

A defiant Fernandes says he is ready for a debate on his con...

Black money was made white through demonetisation, then deposited in BJP's account: Priyanka Gandhi Vadra

'My mother's mangalsutra was sacrificed for this country'; Priyanka Gandhi's blistering attack on PM

Priyanka was referring to Modi's allegations that the Congre...

Why is Prime Minister Narendra Modi building on the ‘M’ factor, is low voter turnout in phase 1 a reason?

Why is Prime Minister Narendra Modi building on ‘M’ factor, is low voter turnout in Phase 1 the reason?

Attacking the Congress using the ‘M’—manifesto, ‘mangalsutra...


Cities

View All