Amaravati (AP): Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister YS Jaganmohan Reddy on Thursday said that the "judiciary crossed its limits" and went against the federal spirit in issuing an "impractical order" over his government's plan to establish three capitals and stated the March 3 ruling of the AP High Court on the matter "cannot be implemented."
Chief Minister YS Jagan Mohan Reddy, Assembly Speaker T Seetaram, Legislative Affairs Minister Buggana Rajendranath and several other members attacked the High Court over the March 3 verdict even as they proclaimed "great respect" for the judiciary. They also vowed to safeguard the "sovereign authority" of the Assembly. The Assembly took up a short discussion on "decentralisation of governance," based on a letter written by senior legislator Dharmana Prasada Rao to the Chief Minister over the High Court verdict, wherein the state was ordered to "construct and develop Amaravati capital city and capital region within six months time."
The discussion centred mainly around the High Court ruling that "the state Legislature lacked the competence to make any legislation for shifting, bifurcating or trifurcating the capital," with the members asking what was the Assembly for if not to make laws. Dharmana Prasada Rao and Buggana Rajendranath, in particular, referred to various judgements of the Supreme Court to buttress their charge that the High Court sought to transgress into the legislative domain. Speaking towards the end of the discussion, the Chief Minister said the "judiciary crossed its limits" and went against the federal spirit in issuing an impractical order.
He asserted that his government would go ahead with the decentralisation plan (by establishing three different capitals for the state) as there was no alternative to it. "Decentralisation is our policy. Decision on capitals is our right and responsibility," Jagan Mohan Reddy maintained. The High Court verdict, delivered by a three-member bench headed by Chief Justice Prashant Kumar Mishra, was "like questioning not only the Constitution but also the powers of the legislature." It was against the federal spirit and the legislative powers, the Chief Minister observed.