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After the frenetic meetings and angry exchanges of Wednesday and Thursday, Tamil Nadu now faces a calm before the storm.
O Panneerselvam continues to be confident of proving that a majority of MLAs are with him. Sasikala’s legislators stay mostly gathered in a resort on the East Coast Road, claiming that they are there of their own free will, and to show their support to the AIADMK General Secretary. And Governor C Vidyasagar Rao is yet to reveal what action he will take next. Rao, however, said he wasn’t ‘prudent to invite Sasikala to form the government’, according to reports.
TNM spoke to constitutional expert Dr Subhash C Kashyap to find out the likely scenarios that could play out in the Tamil Nadu Assembly soon.
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Kashyap says that the Governor has four options before him:
In all these cases, the next Chief Minister would need to have a majority of all the members who are present and voting.
If we should assume that every member of the Assembly is present and votes, then the magic number would be 117 legislators, since that would be a majority of the total number of 234 seats in the Tamil Nadu Assembly. The AIADMK’s strength in the Assembly is currently 134 MLAs, with the DMK’s strength standing at 89.
Kashyap points out that proceedings under the anti-defection law, laid out in the 10th Schedule of the Constitution, are separate from the proceedings of a government proving a majority.
Kashyap says that in a case where the AIADMK issues a whip asking all MLAs to vote for Sasikala, and Panneerselvam or anyone else disobeys this whip, a petition may be filed with the Speaker for action to be taken against these members of the House.
However, Kashyap adds, this process can take varying amounts of time depending on the Speaker, and is also further subject to judicial review. So, it will not directly affect the appointment of the Chief Minister in the immediate future.
The law says that if two-thirds of the membership of a party choose to merge with another party, then their action will not result in disqualification.
It is also important to note is that if the Governor should choose the fourth option (holding a secret ballot in the House), then the provisions of the anti-defection law would not apply since all the members of the House would have voted through secret ballot.
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Published: 10 Feb 2017,06:51 PM IST