When the Chief Justice steps away
When the Chief Justice Steps Away
UPSC Study Note — GS-II (Polity & Governance) | Prelims + Mains
1. At a Glance
- Judicial recusal is the voluntary withdrawal of a judge from hearing a case due to perceived or actual conflict of interest, bias, or appearance of bias. [S1]
- In India, no statute codifies when a judge must recuse — it remains entirely a matter of individual judicial conscience. [S1]
- The topic intersects key UPSC themes: independence of the judiciary, Election Commission autonomy, separation of powers, and natural justice.
- Two consecutive Chief Justices of India (CJI Sanjiv Khanna in 2024 and CJI Surya Kant in 2026) have recused from the same case, making this a live constitutional flashpoint. [S1][Article]
2. Why in the News
- March 20, 2026: CJI Surya Kant recused from hearing a batch of petitions (Dr. Jaya Thakur v. Union of India, 2024) challenging the Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) Act, 2023. [Article]
- The Act replaced the Chief Justice of India with a Union Cabinet Minister on the selection panel for appointing the CEC and other Election Commissioners. [S2][Article]
- CJI Surya Kant stated: "I will be accused of conflict of interest" — since the Act directly affects the institutional standing of the CJI's office. [Article]
- He directed the case to be listed on April 7 before a bench of judges not in the line of succession to the office of CJI. [Article]
- CJI Sanjiv Khanna had earlier recused from the same case in 2024 — making this the second consecutive recusal by a sitting CJI. [Article]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1991 | Election Commission (Conditions of Service of Election Commissioners and Transaction of Business) Act, 1991 — the earlier law governing ECs; no structured selection panel. [S2] |
| March 2023 | Supreme Court (Anoop Baranwal v. Union of India) held that CEC/EC appointments should not be solely executive and mandated a Selection Committee comprising PM, Leader of Opposition, and the CJI. [S2] |
| August 2023 | Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) Bill, 2023 introduced in Rajya Sabha. [S2] |
| December 2023 | Bill passed and enacted; CJI replaced by a Union Cabinet Minister nominated by PM on the selection panel. [S2] |
| 2024 | Petitions challenging the Act filed; CJI Sanjiv Khanna recuses. [Article] |
| March 20, 2026 | CJI Surya Kant recuses; directs listing before a separate bench. [Article] |
Predecessor: The 1991 Act governed service conditions but had no selection mechanism — appointments were purely executive prerogative. [S2]
4. Core Static Facts
The Act — Key Provisions [S2]
- Full name: Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) Act, 2023
- Repeals: Election Commission (Conditions of Service of Election Commissioners and Transaction of Business) Act, 1991
- Selection Committee: 1. Prime Minister (Chairperson) 2. Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha 3. A Union Cabinet Minister nominated by the PM
- Term of Office: 6 years or until age 65, whichever is earlier
- Re-appointment: CEC and ECs are not eligible for re-appointment
- Constitutional basis: Article 324 of the Constitution (Election Commission)
- SC interim arrangement (2023): Selection committee included CJI — the 2023 Act superseded this
Judicial Recusal — Key Facts [S1]
- Governing principle: Nemo judex in causa sua ("no one shall be a judge in their own cause") — foundational maxim of natural justice
- Codified statute: None in India; no legislation mandates or regulates judicial recusal
- Decision-maker: Solely the individual judge; no party can compel recusal
- Doctrine of Necessity: When all judges share an identical conflict, institutional duty overrides — court must hear the case (precedent: NJAC case, 2015)
- NJAC precedent: Justice Khehar refused recusal in the 2015 NJAC case, invoking the doctrine of necessity — the opposite approach to CJI Surya Kant's in 2026 [S1]
- Case citation: Dr. Jaya Thakur v. Union of India (2024) — ongoing challenge to the 2023 Act
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 324: Vests superintendence of elections in the Election Commission; independence of ECs is foundational. [S2]
- The 2023 Act is challenged as diluting EC independence — by giving the executive 2 of 3 seats on the selection panel (PM + PM-nominated minister), creating a structural majority. [S2]
- CJI's recusal leaves a constitutional vacuum: every judge in line to become CJI faces the same conflict, making the doctrine of necessity potentially applicable to the entire court. [S1]
- The oral direction barring "judges in line of succession" from hearing the case is legally contentious — recusal cannot be pre-mandated by a predecessor for judges who have not themselves deliberated on the question. [S1]
Ethical / Governance
- Conflict of interest arises because the 2023 Act directly removes the CJI from a panel where the CJI previously sat — any ruling on the Act's validity by a sitting/future CJI carries an inherent appearance of bias. [Article]
- India has no recusal statute, unlike some democracies — the absence invites inconsistency and weakens accountability (two CJIs handled the same case differently). [S1]
- The need for a transparent, codified recusal policy for the Supreme Court is a recurring governance demand. [S1]
Administrative
- The direction to list the case before judges "not in line of succession" is unprecedented — it limits the Master of the Roster power (which vests in the CJI) in a novel way. [S1]
- Repeated recusals cause prolonged pendency of constitutionally significant cases, impacting electoral governance. [S1]
Historical
- NJAC case (2015): Justice J.S. Khehar heard and decided the case even though as a future CJI he was personally interested in the outcome — invoked doctrine of necessity. [S1]
- Two consecutive CJI recusals from the same case is without clear precedent in Indian judicial history. [Article]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- 2024: CJI Sanjiv Khanna recuses from Dr. Jaya Thakur v. Union of India. [Article]
- March 20, 2026: CJI Surya Kant recuses; case relisted for April 7, 2026 before a separately earmarked bench. [Article]
- CJI Surya Kant's oral direction specifically excludes judges "in line of succession to the office of CJI" from the replacement bench — raising fresh constitutional questions about pre-emptive judicial direction. [Article]
- No codified recusal legislation has been introduced in Parliament as of mid-2026; the issue remains judicially unresolved. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) Act, 2023 repeals the Election Commission Act of 1991. [S2]
- Under the 2023 Act, the selection committee for CEC/ECs comprises: PM (Chair), Leader of Opposition, and a Cabinet Minister nominated by PM — not the CJI. [S2]
- The Supreme Court's 2023 interim arrangement (Anoop Baranwal judgment) had included the CJI on the selection panel — the 2023 Act explicitly removed this. [S2]
- Term of CEC and ECs under the 2023 Act: 6 years or age 65, whichever is earlier; no re-appointment. [S2]
- The Latin maxim underlying recusal is Nemo judex in causa sua — "no one shall be a judge in their own cause." [S1]
- No statute in India codifies when a judge must recuse; it is purely a matter of individual judicial conscience. [S1]
- Doctrine of Necessity: When all judges share a conflict of interest equally, institutional duty overrides personal conflict — the court must proceed. [S1]
- The NJAC case (2015) is the precedent where the doctrine of necessity was invoked by Justice Khehar to refuse recusal. [S1]
- The case challenging the 2023 Act is titled Dr. Jaya Thakur v. Union of India (2024). [Article]
- CJI Sanjiv Khanna (2024) and CJI Surya Kant (2026) are the two consecutive CJIs to recuse from the same case — a first in Indian judicial history. [Article]
- Article 324 of the Constitution vests superintendence, direction, and control of elections in the Election Commission of India. [S2]
- The 2023 Act was introduced in Rajya Sabha and passed in December 2023. [S2]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II (Polity, Constitution, Governance, Judiciary)
Syllabus Headings: - Structure, organisation and functioning of the Judiciary - Election Commission of India — functioning and independence - Constitutional bodies — appointment, removal, conditions of service - Transparency and accountability in governance
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
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"The Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) Act, 2023 has been criticised as undermining the independence of the Election Commission. Critically examine." (GS-II, 15 marks)
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"The repeated recusal of Chief Justices of India from hearing the challenge to the CEC Appointment Act, 2023 exposes the absence of a codified judicial recusal framework in India. Discuss the implications and suggest reforms." (GS-II, 15 marks)
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"The doctrine of necessity and the principle of nemo judex in causa sua are often in tension in constitutional adjudication. Analyse with reference to recent Indian jurisprudence." (GS-II, 10 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Why Connected |
|---|---|
| Election Commission of India — Composition & Independence | The 2023 Act directly alters EC appointment; core to understanding the controversy. |
| Collegium System & NJAC Judgment (2015) | Key precedent on doctrine of necessity; judicial appointments overlap with recusal doctrine. |
| Natural Justice Principles (Audi Alteram Partem & Nemo Judex) | Foundational basis for recusal; frequently tested in GS-II and judiciary questions. |
| Separation of Powers in India | Executive encroachment on judicial/EC space is the underlying constitutional tension. |
| Anoop Baranwal v. Union of India (2023) | The Supreme Court judgment that the 2023 Act directly overrides — essential background. |
| Judicial Accountability and Transparency | Recusal is one facet; connects to Judicial Standards and Accountability Bill debates. |
| Office of Profit & Conflict of Interest provisions | Comparative study of how Indian law handles conflict of interest across branches. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
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Wrong panel composition: Many aspirants confuse the 2023 Act's committee (PM + LoP + Cabinet Minister) with the Supreme Court's 2023 interim arrangement (PM + LoP + CJI). The Act removed the CJI — this is the crux of the controversy.
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Conflating recusal with removal: Recusal is voluntary withdrawal by the judge; removal of a Supreme Court judge requires a parliamentary address under Article 124(4). These are entirely different mechanisms.
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Assuming recusal is codified: A common trap — India has no statute governing judicial recusal. It is solely discretionary. Do not confuse with countries like the US (28 U.S.C. § 455).
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Misapplying the doctrine of necessity: The doctrine does NOT mean a judge with a conflict must hear the case — it applies only when ALL judges share an identical conflict and no alternative exists. It is a last resort, not a default.
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Wrong year for the repealed Act: The 2023 Act repeals the 1991 Act (not any 2003 or 2017 legislation). The year 1991 is a common slip in Prelims MCQs.
11. Sources
- [S1] "CJI Recusal & Judicial Ethics: Limits, Precedents, Codification" — https://vajiramandravi.com/current-affairs/cji-recusal-and-judicial-ethics/ — (Tier 4 / coaching compilation)
- [S2] PRS India — "The Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) Bill, 2023" — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/the-chief-election-commissioner-and-other-election-commissioners-appointment-conditions-of-service-and-term-of-office-bill-2023 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] PRS India — Bill Summary — https://prsindia.org/files/bills_acts/bills_parliament/2023/Bill_Summary_Chief_Election_Commissioner_and_other_Election_Commissioners_Bill_2023.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S4] Sansad.in — Bill Text (Rajya Sabha) — https://sansad.in/getFile/BillsTexts/RSBillTexts/PassedRajyaSabha/CRC-CEC-E12132023113818AM.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [Article] V. Venkatesan, "When the Chief Justice steps away" — The Hindu, March 25, 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-03-25/th_international/articleG2IFOQVS8-13979447.ece — (Tier 4, primary source)