New Delhi:In a late-night announcement by the law ministry on Monday, Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar was appointed as the next Chief Election Commissioner succeeding Rajiv Kumar.
The selection panel headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi went ahead with its decision, ignoring the dissent note by Congress leader and Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha, Rahul Gandhi, who was part of the three-member panel.
Gandhi had asked the government to defer its decision on the new CEC till the Supreme Court concluded its hearing on a petition challenging the composition of the selection panel.
The selection panel met in the South Block office of the Prime Minister on Monday evening. Besides Modi and Gandhi, Home Minister Amit Shah is the third member of the selection panel. According to reports, Gandhi’s dissent note was included in the meeting, however, the final decision on the new CEC and EC posts was anyway taken.
Kumar is the first CEC to be appointed under a new law, the Chief Election Commissioner And Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service, and Term of Office) Act, 2023. The new Act replaced the Chief Justice of India on the Selection Committee with a Union Minister nominated by the Prime Minister.
Several petitions challenging the validity of the new Act were filed in the Supreme Court. They sought to put on hold the appointment of two Election Commissioners in March 2024 under the new Act, however, the apex court declined to stay the appointments but agreed to hear the matter. The court has yet to give its final decision on the matter.
Who is Gyanesh Kumar?
A 1988-batch Kerala cadre IAS officer, Gyanesh Kumar had a significant stint with the Union Home Ministry. Born on January 27, 1964, Kumar played a key role in implementing decisions following the abrogation of Article 370 of the Constitution in Jammu and Kashmir in 2019. As an Additional Secretary, he was also responsible for handling documents related to the Supreme Court case on the Ram Temple in Ayodhya.
Kumar is the senior of the two commissioners on the three-member panel that was led by Rajiv Kumar till he demitted office on Monday. He took charge as an election commissioner on March 15, 2024.