India top court orders bipartisan panel to select election commissioners
NEW DELHI: India’s top court on Thursday ordered the setting up of a bipartisan panel that will include the prime minister and the chief justice to select the country’s election commissioners, ending a practice of the government effectively choosing them.
The Election Commission of India is an autonomous constitutional authority but opposition parties have regularly accused it of caving into the demands of the ruling party, a charge it has denied.
The new panel will also include the leader of the opposition in the lower house of parliament or the opposition party with the highest number of members in the house.
“This norm will continue to hold good till a law is made by parliament,” said Justice KM Joseph, delivering the order of a constitution bench that heard several appeals calling for an independent committee to appoint election commissioners.
“The election commission of India is to perform the arduous and unenviable task of remaining aloof from all forms of subjugation by and interference from the executive.”
Currently, the president appoints the chief election commissioner and two commissioners for a tenure of six years each. Typically they are former bureaucrats.
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