Chennai: Continuing the confrontation with the DMK government of MK Stalin, Tamil Nadu Governor RN Ravi has returned the Bill seeking to ban online gambling after sitting over it for close to five months. This has given fresh ammunition to political parties to target the Raj Bhavan for acting against the interest of the public.
Not only the ruling DMK and its allies, but even those in the opposition ranks, barring the BJP and its coalition partner, AIADMK, have condemned the governor for returning the Bill. The state assembly passed the Tamil Nadu Prohibition of Online Gambling and Regulation Bill on October 19 on the recommendation of a panel headed by Justice K Chandru, retired Judge of Madras High Court. Framed under protecting 'public order', it sought to ban rummy and poker and was sent to the Raj Bhavan on October 28. This Bill was to replace an ordinance promulgated earlier which had lapsed.
There was a growing chorus for the governor to give early assent without any delay since 47 persons who were trapped in the web of online gambling had lost huge amounts of money and taken the extreme step of ending their lives. However, Ravi who kept a studied silence on these demands had given an audience to the E-Gaming Federation (EGF) representatives at the Raj Bhavan in December last, fueling speculations of being partisan.
Lack of legislative competence is the reason given by the Governor for returning the Bill. In support of his contention, he referred to the draft amendments to the rules of the IT Act – Intermediary Liability and Digital Media Ethic Code – 2021. The Union IT Ministry invited feedback from the public for the amendments in January this year. This line of reasoning too has been debunked.
State law minister S Reghupathy, hinting at the re-adoption of the Bill, wondered how the governor could return it when the High Court itself had suggested framing fresh legislation. “The court had never said that the legislature doesn't have the competence,” he pointed out. Vociferous in its demand for proscribing online gambling, the Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK) has countered the governor's rationale.
“Nowhere, the Constitution says that a state assembly does not have the power to enact legislation to ban online gambling. More than 10 states including Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Kerala, and Karnataka have passed such statutes. Madras High Court too has made it clear that the state can pass legislation on the basis of requisite data for skill and chances,” PMK president and former Union Health Minister Anbumani Ramadoss, MP, said in a statement.