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About 30% of MPs and MLAs face serious criminal cases

What are “Serious Criminal Charges”?

  • Definition:
    • Offences punishable with 5 years or more imprisonment, OR
    • Non-bailable offences.
  • Examples: Murder, rape, kidnapping, corruption, extortion, rioting, etc.
  • Declared in self-sworn affidavits filed by candidates to the Election Commission (mandatory since Supreme Court ruling in ADR vs Union of India, 2002).

Relevance : GS 2(Democracy , Constitution ,Polity)

National Trends

  • Lok Sabha (2009–2024):
    • 2009 → 14% MPs with serious criminal cases.
    • 2024 → 31% MPs with serious criminal cases (more than doubled).
  • State Assemblies (2024):
    • 29% MLAs face serious criminal charges (~1,200 MLAs).
  • Indicates a rising criminalisation of politics.

State-Wise Analysis

  • MPs (2024):
    • Telangana → Highest share (71%).
    • Bihar → 48%.
    • Uttar Pradesh → Highest absolute number (34 MPs).
  • MLAs (2024):
    • Andhra Pradesh → Highest share (56%).
    • Telangana → 50%.
    • Uttar Pradesh → Highest absolute number (154 MLAs, 38% of total).

Why does this happen

  • Electoral factors:
    • Candidates with muscle and money power have higher winnability.
    • Voters sometimes prefer such candidates for “protection” or local influence.
  • Legal loopholes:
    • Conviction (not charges) leads to disqualification (Representation of People Act, 1951).
    • Cases drag for years; candidates contest despite multiple charges.
  • Party incentives:
    • Parties prioritise “winnability” over criminal record.
    • Criminals often fund their own campaigns.
  • Weak enforcement:
    • Poor police/judicial capacity → cases pending for decades.

Consequences

  • Democratic credibility: Declining public faith in institutions.
  • Governance impact: Policy-making influenced by vested interests.
  • Rule of law weakened: Lawmakers themselves accused of serious offences.
  • Institutional capture: Politicians influence police, bureaucracy, and judiciary to delay/derail cases.
  • Social fabric: Criminalisation linked with rise in violence, caste/communal politics.

Judicial & Institutional Responses

  • Supreme Court directives:
    • 2013 Lily Thomas case: Convicted legislators disqualified immediately.
    • 2014 SC: Ordered EC to collect affidavits on criminal, financial, educational background.
    • 2020 SC: Ordered parties to publish reasons for giving tickets to candidates with criminal cases (not just winnability).
  • Election Commission efforts:
    • Voter awareness campaigns (NOTA, background disclosures).
    • But limited powers to reject nominations.
  • Parliamentary inaction:
    • No comprehensive law passed to debar charge-sheeted candidates (Law Commission 244th Report, 2014 had recommended this).

Way Forward

  • Legal reforms:
    • Amend RPA, 1951 to bar candidates with serious charges (framed by court, not just FIRs).
    • Fast-track courts for speedy disposal of cases against politicians.
  • Electoral reforms:
    • State funding of elections to reduce dependence on money-criminal nexus.
    • Stricter scrutiny of party candidate selection.
  • Judicial reforms:
    • De-clog criminal justice system → quick trial and conviction/acquittal.
  • Political will:
    • Parties must self-regulate by denying tickets to tainted candidates.
  • Public pressure:
    • Civil society + media vigilance.
    • Voter awareness campaigns against criminal candidates.

August 2025
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