Bombay High Court junks pleas challenging voice vote win of BJP government in House

Order was given by bench headed by Justices V M Kanade, which dismissed bunch of petitions challenging voice vote ordered by Speaker Haribhau Bagde.

Bombay High Court junks pleas challenging voice vote win of BJP government in House
MUMBAI: The Bombay High Court today said it did not have the jurisdiction to hear petitions challenging the decision of Maharashtra Assembly Speaker who had ordered a ' voice vote' instead of a head count, enabling the newly-elected BJP government to prove its majority in the House last month.

The order was given by a bench headed by Justices V M Kanade, which dismissed a bunch of petitions challenging the voice vote ordered by the Speaker Haribhau Bagde after a trust vote motion was moved by the BJP to prove its majority in the 288-member House.

Earlier, the bench had asked the petitioners to cite Supreme Court judgements to show that high court had the jurisdiction to hear such matters. Accordingly, some apex court orders were submitted to the HC.

In his petition, Congress leader Naseem Khan had challenged the way the BJP government proved its majority in the Assembly on November 12 and questioned the Speaker's controversial decision to allow passage of the trust motion through a voice vote instead of a head-count (division of votes).

The other two were public interest litigations (PILs) on the same issue and had been clubbed with Khan's petition. One among them was filed by Rajkumar Awasthi, while the other jointly by Sanjay Lakhe Patil and Sanjay Chitnis.

The PILs argued that under the constitutional provisions, the respondents (Speaker and Chief Minister) are duty-bound to hold a secret ballot or head count to establish government's majority in House. But this was not done.
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The decision of the Speaker to go for a voice vote was illegal and unconstitutional, they had alleged.

Opposition Shiv Sena and Congress had strongly criticised the "manner" in which Fadnavis government won the crucial trust vote dubbing it as a "foul play".

However, the BJP government had defended the Speaker's decision, saying all norms were adhered to in passing the trust vote.

"The first option for the Speaker is voice vote followed by a division of votes...if majority is proved by a voice vote then there is no need to go for a head count," Advocate General Sunil Manohar had argued during the course of hearing on petitions.
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Even the rules of the legislature prescribe that voice vote is the norm, he had submitted.
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