Elections: Supreme Court to take call on fight from two seats

Election Commission favours proposal to bar candidate from contesting from 2 seats.

Update: 2019-03-27 19:14 GMT

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Wednesday agreed to examine whether a candidate can be allowed to contest from two Assembly/Lok Sabha constituencies during the elections.

A bench headed by Justice S.A. Bobde told advocate and petitioner Ashwini Kumar Upadhyaya, who mentioned it for urgent listing, that the matter would be listed for hearing after two weeks. The Election Commission has said that it favoured the proposal to bar a candidate from contesting in two Assembly/parliamentary constituencies during elections but the Centre has justified such a provision of law.

Section 33(7) of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, allows a person to contest a general election or a group of bye-elections or biennial elections from two constituencies, whereas Section 70 of the RPA, specifies that if a person is elected to more than one seat in either House of the Parliament or in either House of the State Legislature, then he/she can only hold on to one of the seats that he/she won in the election.

BJP advocate and spokesperson Ashwini Kumar Upadhyaya had challenged this provision as unconstitutional.

The Election Commission in its response said it had made a proposal to the government in 2004 and 2016 to amend the provisions of Representation of the People Act to restrict the contest from only one constituency. It was for the Centre to act on the proposal.

Rejecting the EC’s proposal, the Centre in its affidavit said the provision was intended to strike a reasonable balance to candidates who wanted to contest in two constituencies and the rights of voters. Such a provision provides wider choice to the polity as well as the candidate and is in line with the democratic set up in the country.

It said the petitioner had failed to demonstrate the injustice it may cause to the voters at large and could not ask the court to legislate.

It said every individual has a right to contest elections and Section 70 of the RP Act only lays down the procedure to be followed to give up one constituency if he/she wins both the seats.

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