Election Law
Subject : Law & Politics - Constitutional Law
Hyderabad, Telangana – The Telangana High Court has emphatically upheld the constitutional validity of the two-child eligibility criterion for contesting panchayat elections, dismissing a writ petition that sought to invalidate Section 21(3) of the Telangana Panchayat Raj Act, 2018. The Division Bench, comprising Chief Justice Aparesh Kumar Singh and Justice G.M Mohiuddin, found the petitioner's novel challenge, based on the absence of Presidential assent, insufficient to overturn established legal precedent.
The ruling in Uppu Veeranna v/s State of Telangana reinforces the legal framework that permits states to impose such restrictions for local body elections, primarily drawing its strength from the seminal Supreme Court judgment in Javed v. State of Haryana (2003).
The petitioner, represented by Advocate Vijay Gopal, challenged the provision that disqualifies any person with more than two children from contesting in the state's panchayat elections. The core of the petitioner's argument was an attempt to distinguish the Telangana legislation from the similar Haryana Panchayat Raj Act, 1994, which the Supreme Court had previously upheld in the Javed case.
The novel plea centered on a procedural and constitutional distinction: while the Haryana Act had received the assent of the President of India, the Telangana Panchayat Raj Act, 2018, was enacted solely with the assent of the state Governor. The petitioner contended that this was a fatal flaw, arguing that the law fell foul of the proviso to Article 31C of the Constitution. This proviso mandates that any state law which could potentially infringe upon the fundamental rights guaranteed under Articles 14 or 19 must be reserved for the President's consideration and receive his assent to be valid.
By framing the two-child norm as a violation of the right to equality (Article 14) and the right to practice any profession or carry on any occupation (Article 19), the petitioner argued that the lack of Presidential assent rendered the disqualification clause unconstitutional.
The Division Bench, however, remained unpersuaded by this line of reasoning. Representing the respondents, Government Pleader Shazia Parveen and Senior Counsel P. Sudheer Rao argued that the matter was squarely covered by existing jurisprudence. The court concurred, noting that the issue had already been settled by a co-ordinate bench of the High Court, which had relied on the Supreme Court's definitive pronouncements in Javed .
The bench systematically dismantled the petitioner's arguments. It began by addressing the alleged infraction of fundamental rights. The court stated, “We have conferred anxious consideration to this issue, but we fail to decipher as to how the impugned provision under the Act of 2018 would amount to infraction of the right conferred by Articles 14 or 19 of the Constitution of India.”
Crucially, the court leaned on the foundational principle established in Javed —that contesting an election is not a fundamental right but a statutory one. The judgment quoted the Supreme Court, observing, "...it has been categorically held that there is no fundamental right to any person to stand as a candidate for election to the Municipality."
Consequently, since the right to contest is not a fundamental right under Part III of the Constitution, the disqualification imposed by Section 21(3) cannot be seen as an unreasonable restriction on such a right. The court further clarified that the provision does not impinge upon the fundamental right to practice a profession under Article 19(1)(g), as holding an elected office is not considered an "occupation, trade, or business" in the constitutional sense.
The High Court reinforced the Supreme Court's rationale that the two-child norm is a policy measure devised in the broader national interest. The judgment reiterated the Apex Court's view that such a disqualification is not arbitrary or unreasonable.
"The Apex Court further observed that disqualification on the right to contest an election by having more than two living children does not contravene any fundamental right nor it crosses the limits of reasonability. Rather, it is a disqualification conceptually devised in national interest," the bench noted.
With this strong endorsement from the highest court, the Telangana High Court concluded that the petitioner's "novel plea" to re-examine the vires of Section 21(3) was bound to fail. The court emphasized that it was not only bound by the Supreme Court's decision in Javed but also by the pronouncements of its own co-ordinate benches on the same issue.
This judgment serves as a significant reaffirmation of the legal tenability of the two-child norm for participation in local self-governance. It effectively closes the door on challenges based on the lack of Presidential assent, at least in cases where the law does not directly and demonstrably infringe upon a recognized fundamental right.
For legal practitioners, the decision underscores the high bar for challenging legislation that has already passed muster before the Supreme Court. The court's refusal to differentiate the Telangana Act from the Haryana Act on the grounds of Presidential assent suggests that such procedural arguments are unlikely to succeed unless a clear and direct violation of a fundamental right can be established—a premise the court rejected in this context.
The dismissal of the writ petition ensures that the two-child eligibility criterion remains a valid and enforceable provision in Telangana's panchayat electoral system, aligning with a policy objective that the judiciary has consistently recognized as being in the national interest.
#PanchayatRaj #ElectionLaw #ConstitutionalLaw
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