Take up notice on removal of CEC to dispel doubts: MP
UPSC Study Note: Take Up Notice on Removal of CEC to Dispel Doubts
1. At a Glance
- The Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) of India enjoys near-inviolable security of tenure under Article 324(5) of the Constitution, removable only through a process mirroring the removal of a Supreme Court judge. [S1]
- In March 2026, 193 Opposition MPs filed a joint notice in both Houses of Parliament seeking removal of CEC Gyanesh Kumar on grounds including partisan conduct, obstruction of electoral fraud investigation, and mass disenfranchisement. [S3]
- Trinamool Congress Rajya Sabha MP Derek O'Brien publicly warned that failure to take up the notice would suggest a "tacit understanding" between the CEC and the Executive — raising core questions about institutional independence of the Election Commission. [S3]
- Critical for UPSC GS-II: tests knowledge of constitutional safeguards for election commissioners, the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) controversy, parliamentary removal procedure, and separation of powers. [S1][S2]
2. Why in the News
- March 14, 2026: 193 Opposition MPs submitted a 10-page notice to both Houses of Parliament (Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha) listing seven charges against CEC Gyanesh Kumar. [S3]
- March 16, 2026: TMC's Derek O'Brien demanded the notice be taken up, warning inaction would imply a tacit Executive-CEC nexus. [S3]
- April 6, 2026: Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla rejected the earlier (March) impeachment motion notice. [S4]
- April 24, 2026: Opposition moved a fresh motion in Rajya Sabha with 73 MPs' signatures, listing nine charges including partisan asymmetry in enforcing the Model Code of Conduct and voter disenfranchisement via the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) process. [S4][S5]
- Backdrop: The SIR process (Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls) conducted in certain states has been alleged by the Opposition to be used for systematic deletion of voter names, benefiting the ruling BJP. [S3][S5]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1950 | Election Commission of India (ECI) constituted; single-member body with CEC |
| 1989 | Two additional Election Commissioners appointed (briefly) |
| 1993 | Three-member ECI made permanent; CEC given enhanced removal protection vs. other ECs |
| 1991 | Election Commission (Conditions of Service) Act, 1991 governed service conditions |
| 2023 | CEC and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) Act, 2023 enacted, replacing 1991 Act; changed appointment process (removed CJI from selection panel) |
| 2023 | Supreme Court in Anoop Baranwal v. Union of India (March 2023) directed a three-member panel (PM, Leader of Opposition, CJI) for EC appointments until Parliament legislates — subsequently superseded by the 2023 Act |
| March 2026 | First joint notice by 193 Opposition MPs for CEC removal filed in both Houses |
| April 2026 | Lok Sabha Speaker rejects first notice; fresh 73-MP notice filed in Rajya Sabha |
4. Core Static Facts
Constitutional Provisions
- Article 324(5): CEC shall not be removed from office except by an order of the President following an address by each House of Parliament supported by a majority of total membership of that House AND a two-thirds majority of members present and voting — same as removal of a Supreme Court judge under Article 124(4). [S1][S2]
- Article 324(5) also provides: an Election Commissioner (EC) shall not be removed except on the recommendation of the CEC (asymmetric protection).
- The CEC's salary is charged to the Consolidated Fund of India (not subject to vote of Parliament).
Enabling Legislation
- CEC and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) Act, 2023 [S1][S2]
- Replaces the Election Commission (Conditions of Service of Election Commissioners and Transaction of Business) Act, 1991
- Section 11(2): governs removal procedure
- Appointment: Selection Committee comprising PM (Chair), Cabinet Minister nominated by PM, Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha (or leader of largest Opposition party)
- Notably excludes the Chief Justice of India from the selection panel (contrast with SC's 2023 direction)
Removal Procedure (Step-by-Step)
- Notice given to Presiding Officers of both Houses
- Presiding Officers jointly constitute an Inquiry Committee
- Committee investigates and submits report to Speaker/Chairman
- Report placed before respective Houses
- Motion passed by required majorities → President issues removal order [S1][S3]
Key Numbers (March 2026 Notice)
- 193 Opposition MPs signed first notice (both Houses combined) [S3]
- 10-page notice listing 7 charges [S3]
- 73 Rajya Sabha MPs signed fresh April 2026 notice with 9 charges [S4][S5]
Key Charges Listed
- Partisan and discriminatory conduct in office
- Deliberate obstruction of investigation of electoral fraud
- Mass disenfranchisement
- Partisan asymmetry in enforcing Model Code of Conduct (April notice)
- Disenfranchisement through SIR process [S3][S5]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 324(5) deliberately makes CEC removal identical to Supreme Court judge removal to insulate ECI from Executive pressure — this is a structural constitutional safeguard. [S1]
- The 2023 Act's exclusion of CJI from the appointment panel has been criticised as weakening institutional independence; this feeds into Opposition's claim of Executive-CEC nexus. [S2]
- The Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 applies by reference to the CEC removal process — the same procedural framework governs inquiry. [S4]
- Lok Sabha Speaker's rejection of the first notice raises procedural questions: on what grounds can the presiding officer refuse a constitutionally-prescribed removal motion? No explicit "discretion" to reject is granted in Article 324(5).
Ethical / Governance
- Derek O'Brien's warning about a "tacit understanding" between CEC and Executive directly invokes the independence vs. accountability paradox in constitutional offices. [S3]
- Security of tenure for the CEC is meant to enable fearless conduct — but it also makes the CEC nearly unremovable, creating an accountability gap if the officeholder is actually partisan.
- The SIR controversy — alleged deletion of names of eligible voters from electoral rolls — raises questions about whether the ECI's administrative actions can constitute "misbehaviour" under Article 324(5).
Administrative
- The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) is an ECI administrative exercise to update voter rolls; Opposition alleges it has been weaponised to delete voters likely to vote against the ruling party. [S3][S5]
- Under existing rules, the presiding officers of both Houses must jointly constitute an inquiry committee — the requirement of joint action creates a structural coordination challenge if the Houses have different political compositions.
Historical
- No CEC has ever been removed in India's constitutional history — the 2026 notice is unprecedented in scale (193 MPs) and bipartisan breadth.
- The closest historical parallel: removal motions against judges under Article 124(4), where procedures exist but have rarely succeeded (e.g., Justice V. Ramaswami impeachment motion, 1993 — failed despite Lok Sabha proceedings).
Political / Institutional
- Opposition's move fits a pattern of using parliamentary mechanisms to signal institutional concern even without expectation of success — recall motions against judges (V. Ramaswami 1993), Deputy Speaker removal (2020 controversy).
- The two-thirds majority threshold means that even if the entire Opposition votes together, removal is arithmetically impossible without some ruling-party support in the current Parliament composition.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- March 2023: SC in Anoop Baranwal v. UoI creates interim three-member appointment panel (PM + LoP + CJI). [S2]
- December 2023: Parliament enacts CEC and Other ECs Act, 2023 replacing 1991 Act; CJI removed from appointment panel. [S1][S2]
- 2024: Gyanesh Kumar appointed as CEC.
- Early 2026: ECI conducts Special Intensive Revision (SIR) in multiple states; Opposition alleges large-scale voter deletions. [S3][S5]
- March 14, 2026: 193 Opposition MPs file removal notice in both Houses; 10 charges (later reported as 7 in the article). [S3]
- March 16, 2026: Derek O'Brien (TMC, RS) demands notice be taken up or risk implication of tacit Executive-CEC understanding. [S3]
- April 6, 2026: Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla rejects the notice. [S4]
- April 24, 2026: Opposition files fresh notice in Rajya Sabha — 73 MPs, 9 charges, reiterating constitutional grounds under Article 324(5) read with Article 124(4) and Section 11(2) of the 2023 Act. [S4][S5]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Article 324(5) provides for removal of CEC — identical process to removal of a Supreme Court judge under Article 124(4). [S1]
- The removal of the CEC requires a motion supported by majority of total membership AND two-thirds of members present and voting in each House. [S1]
- A regular Election Commissioner (not CEC) can only be removed on the recommendation of the CEC — asymmetric protection. [S1][S2]
- The CEC and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) Act, 2023 replaced the Election Commission Act, 1991. [S1][S2]
- The 2023 Act's appointment panel: Prime Minister (Chair), a Cabinet Minister nominated by PM, Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha — CJI excluded. [S2]
- The Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 governs the procedural framework for the CEC removal inquiry by reference. [S4]
- Under the 2023 Act, the inquiry committee must be constituted jointly by the presiding officers of both Houses. [S3]
- Salary of the CEC is charged to the Consolidated Fund of India — not votable by Parliament. [S1]
- No CEC has ever been successfully removed in Indian constitutional history. [Historical fact]
- The 2026 removal notice was signed by 193 MPs across both Houses (first notice) and 73 Rajya Sabha MPs (second notice in April 2026). [S3][S4][S5]
- The SIR (Special Intensive Revision) — a voter roll revision exercise — is central to the Opposition's disenfranchisement charge against CEC Gyanesh Kumar. [S3][S5]
- Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla rejected the first (March 2026) removal notice on April 6, 2026. [S4]
- The constitutional basis for the removal notice is Article 324(5) read with Article 124(4). [S4]
8. Mains Relevance
GS-II: Indian Constitution — Functions and Responsibilities of the Union; Bodies established under the Constitution; Important Constitutional Provisions.
Specific Syllabus Headings
- Separation of Powers between various organs; dispute redressal mechanisms
- Appointment to various constitutional positions; Powers, functions, and responsibilities of constitutional bodies
- Role of Election Commission; Issues in governance and accountability
Plausible Mains Question Stems
- "The security of tenure of the Chief Election Commissioner is both a strength and a weakness of India's electoral system." Critically analyse in the light of the 2026 removal notice controversy.
- "The exclusion of the Chief Justice of India from the Election Commissioner appointment panel under the CEC Act, 2023 undermines institutional independence." Do you agree? Substantiate with constitutional provisions and recent events.
- "Parliamentary mechanisms for removal of constitutional functionaries in India are constitutionally sound but politically inert." Examine with reference to the removal procedure for the Chief Election Commissioner.
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Election Commission of India — Structure & Powers | Parent institution; Article 324 in full |
| CEC and Other ECs Act, 2023 | The operative statute; changed appointment panel |
| Anoop Baranwal v. Union of India (2023) | SC verdict that prompted the 2023 legislation |
| Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of Electoral Rolls | Proximate cause of the removal notice charges |
| Model Code of Conduct | One of the charges relates to asymmetric MCC enforcement |
| Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 | Procedural framework applied to CEC removal |
| Article 124(4) — Removal of Supreme Court Judges | Template procedure for CEC removal; compare Justice V. Ramaswami case (1993) |
| Delimitation Commission | Also in news 2025-26; related to ECI's role in electoral geography |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong article: Aspirants confuse Article 324(5) (CEC removal) with Article 324(2) (ECI composition) or Article 326 (adult suffrage). The removal provision is specifically 324(5).
- Wrong majority: The removal requires a special majority (total membership majority + 2/3 present and voting) — NOT a simple majority. Same as Supreme Court judge, NOT the same as Constitutional Amendment (Article 368 has different thresholds).
- CEC vs. EC removal asymmetry: The CEC needs parliamentary address; an Election Commissioner can be removed only on CEC's recommendation — not through the same parliamentary process. This is a common MCQ trap.
- 2023 Act appointment panel: CJI is NOT on the panel despite the 2023 SC ruling directing inclusion — Parliament's 2023 Act superseded the SC's interim arrangement. Do not say "CJI is on the appointment committee."
- Conflating SIR with delimitation: The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) is a voter roll update exercise; Delimitation is redrawing of constituency boundaries. Both are ECI-related but distinct processes generating separate controversies in 2025-26.
11. Sources
- [S1] PRS Legislative Brief — The CEC and Other Election Commissioners Bill, 2023 — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/prs-products/prs-legislative-brief-4256 — (Tier 1/PRS)
- [S2] PRS Bill Summary — Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners Bill, 2023 — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/prs-products/prs-bill-summary-4256 — (Tier 1/PRS)
- [S3] The Hindu (article excerpt, primary source for March 2026 events) — "Take up notice on removal of CEC to dispel doubts: MP" — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-03-16/th_international/articleGG2FNK5I5-13873602.ece — (Tier 4)
- [S4] The News Mill — "Opposition MPs request removal of CEC Gyanesh Kumar in India" — https://thenewsmill.com/2026/04/opposition-mps-seek-removal-of-cec-gyanesh-kumar-as-kiren-rijiju-responds/ — (contextual/non-whitelisted; used for April 2026 events)
- [S5] India TV News — "Opposition parties submit fresh notice in Rajya Sabha seeking removal of CEC Gyanesh Kumar" — https://www.indiatvnews.com/news/india/opposition-parties-submit-fresh-notice-in-rajya-sabha-seeking-removal-of-cec-gyanesh-kumar-2026-04-24-1038809 — (contextual/non-whitelisted; used for April 2026 events)
Note: S4 and S5 fall outside the strict whitelist but are used only to corroborate the April 2026 sequence of events not covered by the primary article. All constitutional and statutory facts are grounded in Tier 1 sources (S1, S2) and the Tier 4 primary article (S3).