+
  • HOME»
  • Congress welcomes SC move to hear Aadhaar Act challenge as money bill

Congress welcomes SC move to hear Aadhaar Act challenge as money bill

Congress leader Jairam Ramesh on Monday targeted the government over the bulldozing of Bills in Parliament in last 10 years under Article 110 of the Constitution and welcomed the Supreme Court agreeing to consider a submission for setting up a constitution bench to hear pleas challenging the validity of passage of laws like the Aadhaar […]

Congress leader Jairam Ramesh on Monday targeted the government over the bulldozing of Bills in Parliament in last 10 years under Article 110 of the Constitution and welcomed the Supreme Court agreeing to consider a submission for setting up a constitution bench to hear pleas challenging the validity of passage of laws like the Aadhaar Act as money bills, and hoped a final verdict will come before CJI D Y Chandrachud retires in November this year.

In a post on X, formerly Twitter Ramesh, who is also the party’s general secretary and communications incharge said, “In the last ten years many Bills have been bulldozed through Parliament by having them declared ‘Money Bills’ under Article 110 of the Constitution. A good example of this is the Aadhar Act of 2016. I had challenged its declaration as a money bill in the Supreme Court, and in his dissenting judgment then the present CJI had called this declaration as a ‘fraud on the Constitution’. I had challenged other instances as well.”

“The verdict of the CJI today to set up a separate Constitutional Bench to hear pleas on the gross misuse of Article 110 since 2014 is a welcome step. Hopefully a final and definitive pronouncement will come before he retires in November 2024,” the Congress leader said.
His remarks came after a bench comprising Chief Justice of India (CJI) Chandrachud and justices J B Pardiwala and Manoj Misra was urged by senior advocate Kapil Sibal, who also heads the Supreme Court Bar Association, that the pleadings are complete and the petitions needed to be listed for hearing.

The CJI said that “I will take the call when I form the constitution benches”.

Earlier, the Supreme Court had said it would constitute a seven-judge bench to consider the issue of validity of passage of laws like the Aadhaar Act as a ‘money bill’.

The decision came over the controversy around money bills after the government introduced legislations like the Aadhaar Act and even amendments to the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) as money bills, apparently to circumvent the Rajya Sabha where it did not have a majority then.

Advertisement