Mumbai (Maharashtra): Five days after the Maharashtra Assembly Speaker Rahul Narwekar said that the Chief Minister Eknath Shinde led Shiv Sena faction was the “real Shiv Sena”, former Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray and chief of the rival faction on Monday approached the Supreme Court against the Speaker's declaration, sources said. Sources said the Thackeray has filed a petition in the apex court in this regard.
The petition was filed through senior advocate Devdatt Kamat and advocates Nishanth Patil and Rohit Sharma. Thackeray faction has sought interim stay on the January 10 decision of the speaker. Maharashtra Assembly Speaker Rahul Narwekar declared that the Sena faction led by Chief Minister Eknath Shinde was the “real Shiv Sena” as he declared all the 16 MLAs of Shinde-faction of the Shiv Sena including Chief Minister Eknath Shinde as valid. The Speaker's ruling came in reaction to the disqualification petitions filed by Shinde-led Sena and the rival faction led by Uddhav Thackeray against each other's MLAs.
The Uddhav Thackeray plea said the Tenth Schedule is intended to disqualify legislators who act against their political party. “However, if majority of legislators are treated to be the political party, then the members of the actual political party become subject to the will of the majority of legislators. This is totally against the constitutional scheme, and is consequently liable to be set aside”, said the plea.
The plea contended that by treating the majority of legislators as representing the will of the political party, the speaker has in effect equated the legislature party with the political party, which is in the teeth of the law laid down by the apex court in Subhash Desai’s case. "The legislature party is not a legal entity. It is merely a nomenclature given to the group of legislators, elected on the ticket of a political party, who are members of a House for a temporary period”, said the plea.
The plea contended that the Tenth Schedule used to permit as a defence to disqualification, if a group of legislators, provided they comprised at least 1/3rd of their legislature party, acted contrary to the directions of their political party. “This was the defence of ‘Split’ which was provided under Para 3. However, this defence was consciously done away with when Para 3 was omitted from the Tenth Schedule. The impugned judgments, in holding that majority of legislators represent the will of the political party, have in effect revived the defence of split, which had been consciously omitted”, said the plea.