September 3, 2025
Why in the News?
In May 2025, the Supreme Court began examining a Presidential Reference to decide if Governors and the President have the authority to indefinitely withhold assent to State Bills.
Supreme Court Bench Observations:
Oral observations:
Arguments Presented:
Tamil Nadu’s Stand (Advocates A.M. Singhvi & P. Wilson):
West Bengal’s Stand (Kapil Sibal):
“The Governor is not a postman, but he also cannot just sit back and do nothing.”
Kerala Governor’s Plea:
Judge | Observation |
---|---|
Justice Narasimha | No institution holds the authority to obstruct the effective implementation of the Constitution. Timelines may be fixed case-by-case, not generally. |
Justice Vikram Nath | Questioned why only “deemed assent” was considered. Why not consider terms like ‘deemed withholding’ or ‘deemed reference to the President’ as well? |
CJI Gavai | A general timeline for all cases may amount to judicial overreach, though timelines can help ensure discipline and urgency. |
Article | Provision |
---|---|
Article 200 | Governor’s powers over State Bills: assent, withhold, return for reconsideration, or reserve for President. |
Article 201 | If a Bill is sent to the President for consideration, he has the option to either approve it or decline approval. |
Article 154 | Executive power of the state is vested in the Governor but must be exercised in accordance with the Constitution. |
Article 163 | Governors must act on the aid and advice of the Council of Ministers, except where discretion is explicitly allowed. |
Delay in Assent:
Judicial Overreach Concern:
Federal Tensions:
Case | Year | Key Principle |
---|---|---|
Shamsher Singh v. State of Punjab | 1974 | Governor acts on aid and advice of the Council of Ministers, except in discretionary matters. |
Rameshwar Prasad v. Union of India | 2006 | Governor’s actions are subject to judicial review. |
Nabam Rebia v. Deputy Speaker | 2016 | Governor cannot act without the aid and advice of ministers in ordinary circumstances. |
Tamil Nadu Governor Case (Division Bench) | April 2025 | Fixed three-month timeline for assent to Bills; introduced concept of deemed assent. |
September 4, 2025
September 1, 2025
August 27, 2025
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