New Delhi:In a significant departure from the initial draft of the 130th Constitution Amendment Bill, a joint parliamentary committee has recommended that the prime minister, Union ministers, and chief ministers be suspended rather than permanently removed if they are detained in custody for 30 consecutive days on serious criminal charges. The panel concluded that while the bill’s core objective to prevent governance from jail deserves support, attaching permanent constitutional removal to prolonged detention rather than an actual court conviction could compromise the fundamental presumption of innocence. By replacing every reference of permanent removal with temporary suspension, the panel aims to safeguard the stability of elected governments against potential political weaponization and strategic arrests, a major concern previously raised by opposition parties who had dubbed the draft a tool for state destabilization.
To ensure fairness, the parliamentary panel proposed an automatic reversal or sunset clause, stipulating that the suspension would immediately lapse if the minister is acquitted, discharged, or if the prosecution fails to proceed within a specified timeframe. This mechanism ensures an uncomplicated reappointment process for those eventually cleared by the courts, preventing what could otherwise become an irreversible penalty for individuals found not guilty. Furthermore, the committee defined the threshold for serious criminal offences as those carrying a statutory punishment of five years or more in prison and suggested adding a distinct schedule to the legislation to explicitly catalog these qualifying infractions.
Addressing the need for swift judicial resolution, the committee also recommended that legal proceedings involving high-level constitutional functionaries be fast-tracked through special courts, mirroring long-standing directives from the Supreme Court. If the Ministry of Home Affairs accepts these extensive procedural revisions, the finalized recommendations will be presented to the Union Cabinet before official amendments are introduced in the Lok Sabha.