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Can timelines be fixed for Governors?

Background

  • Presidential Reference (May 2025): Supreme Court asked for opinion on 14 questions mainly on Articles 200 and 201 (Governor/President assent to State Bills).
  • Trigger Judgment:State of Tamil Nadu v. Governor of Tamil Nadu & Anr (April 2025)
    • Prescribed timelines:
      • Governor: 3 months to act on Bills (assent, withhold, or reserve for President).
      • President: 3 months to decide on Bills reserved by Governor.
    • Delay beyond timelines can be judicially reviewed.
  • Government Objection: Raised question of Courts authority to prescribe timelines when Constitution does not specify them.

Relevance :

  • GS2 (Polity / Governance): Governors discretion, statecentre relations, federalism, judicial review.
  • GS2 (Constitutional Law): Articles 163, 200, 201, principle of responsible government, commission recommendations.

Constitutional Provisions

  • Article 200: Governor’s options when a State Bill is presented:
    • Assent
    • Withhold (reject)
    • Return for reconsideration
    • Reserve for President
  • Article 163(1): Governor must act per Council of Ministers’ advice, except when Constitution requires discretion.
  • Provison in Article 200: Governor may return Bill “as soon as possible” for reconsideration.
  • Article 201: President’s assent to Bills reserved by Governor; no timeline specified.
  • Discretionary Powers of Governor:
    • Rare, e.g., Bill contravening Constitution or affecting High Court powers.
    • Otherwise, action is ministerial, not discretionary.
  • Judicial Precedent:
    • Shamsher Singh (1974): Governor cannot withhold assent at will; must follow ministers’ advice.
    • April 2025 judgment interpreted “Governor shall” as mandatory, not discretionary.

Commission Recommendations

  • Sarkaria Commission (1987):
    • Only rare reservation of Bills for President implies discretion.
    • President should act within 6 months on reserved Bills.
  • Punchhi Commission (2010):
    • Governor should decide on Bills within 6 months.

Arguments

  • Centre / Union Government:
    • Governor has constitutional discretion under Article 163(1).
    • Courts cannot fix timelines; issues between Governor, State Govt, and President should be resolved politically.
    • Article 201 (President) has no timelines; judicial intervention may undermine federalism.
  • Opposition-ruled States:
    • Governors in such States allegedly delay assent/reserve Bills selectively.
    • Delays against ministerial advice undermine popular mandate.
    • Delay cannot be termed as legitimate discretion.
  • Supreme Courts Stand (April 2025):
    • Interpreted Article 200: “Governor shall” act, not discretionary.
    • Prescribed 3-month timeline for Governor/President actions.
    • Reliance on past judgments (Nabam Rebia, 2006) and commission recommendations.

Challenges

  • Federalism vs Judicial Oversight: Balancing Governor’s discretion with elected government authority.
  • Politicisation of Governors Post: Allegations of bias in Opposition-ruled States.
  • Democratic Functioning: Delays in assent/reservation can stall law-making and governance.

Way Forward

  • Short-Term:
    • Centre and Governors should adhere to April 2025 judgment timelines (3 months) to respect federalism and democratic principles.
    • Await Supreme Court opinion on Presidential reference for clarification.
  • Long-Term / Structural:
    • Consider measures to reduce politicisation of gubernatorial posts.
    • Ensure constitutional scheme provides for nominal head while protecting State governments authority.
    • Foster political consensus to prevent recurrent legislative impasses.

Significance

  • Clarifies scope of Governors discretion vs ministerial advice.
  • Strengthens principle of responsible government at State level.
  • Judicial timelines aim to prevent undue delays in legislative process.
  • Reinforces federal and democratic checks and balances

September 2025
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