HC gives Lokpal two months to decide on sanction against MP


HC Gives Lokpal Two Months to Decide on Sanction Against MP

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2013 Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, 2013 enacted — India's first statutory ombudsman for the Centre; came after Anna Hazare-led agitation (2011) [S2]
2014 Amendment bill introduced but lapsed; Lokpal remained non-functional for years due to non-appointment of members [S2]
March 2019 First Lokpal — Justice (retd.) Pinaki Chandra Ghose — appointed after SC intervention
2022–23 Lokpal becomes operationally active; begins receiving and processing corruption complaints
March 2024 Lokpal affirmed "sufficient prima facie evidence" against Moitra warranting deeper scrutiny [S5]
Nov 2025 Lokpal grants sanction to CBI to file chargesheet against Moitra
Dec 2025 Delhi HC quashes Lokpal's sanction order on procedural grounds
Jan 2026 HC gives Lokpal two months to re-decide; SC later stays HC order (March 2026)

Predecessor context: Before the Lokpal Act, sanction to prosecute senior public servants was granted by the competent authority (President/Governor/appointing authority) under Section 19, Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 and Section 6A, DSPE Act, 1946 — often criticised as allowing the executive to shield its own.


4. Core Static Facts

Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, 2013 - Enacted: 1 January 2014 (received Presidential assent); operationalised 2019 - Jurisdiction (public servants covered): PM, Union Ministers, MPs, Group A/B/C/D central government employees, officers of central public sector enterprises, autonomous bodies, societies/trusts receiving central funds - Composition: Chairperson + up to 8 members (50% must be from Judicial backgrounds; 50% of total members must represent SC/ST/OBC/minorities/women) [S2] - Appointment: By President on recommendation of a Selection Committee (PM as Chair, Lok Sabha Speaker, Leader of Opposition in LS, CJI or nominee, eminent jurist) - Sanction to prosecute: Under Section 20(4) and related provisions of the Lokpal Act, sanction for prosecution of MPs shifts from the executive to the Lokpal — overriding Section 6A of the DSPE Act and Section 19 of the PC Act [S2] - Investigation wings: Lokpal has its own Inquiry Wing and Prosecution Wing; can also direct CBI/other agencies to investigate - Lokayuktas: Parallel anti-corruption ombudsmen at the State level — each state mandated to establish within one year of the central Act (implementation remains uneven) - Cash-for-Query case: Involves allegations that Mahua Moitra accepted cash/gifts from businessman Darshan Hiranandani in exchange for asking questions in Parliament favouring his interests; Lok Sabha expelled her in December 2024 [S1]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act was enacted in 2013 (Presidential assent: January 1, 2014). [S2]
  2. The first Chairperson of Lokpal was Justice (retd.) Pinaki Chandra Ghose, appointed in March 2019. [S2]
  3. Lokpal is composed of a Chairperson and up to 8 members; at least 50% must be from judicial backgrounds. [S2]
  4. The Selection Committee for Lokpal includes: PM (Chair), Lok Sabha Speaker, Leader of Opposition, CJI or nominee, and an eminent jurist. [S2]
  5. Under the Lokpal Act, the power to sanction prosecution of MPs was transferred from the executive/competent authority to the Lokpal — overriding Section 6A of the DSPE Act. [S2]
  6. The Lokpal has an Inquiry Wing and a Prosecution Wing under its structure; it can also direct CBI to investigate. [S2]
  7. The cash-for-query case involves allegations that Moitra took bribes from Darshan Hiranandani to raise questions in Parliament. [S1]
  8. Moitra was expelled from the Lok Sabha in December 2024 following an Ethics Committee recommendation. [S1]
  9. The Delhi HC (December 19, 2025) held the Lokpal's sanction was a "clear departure from the procedure expressly mandated under law." [S1]
  10. The Supreme Court (March 13, 2026) stayed the HC's December 2025 order and is set to authoritatively interpret the law on Lokpal sanctions. [S3]
  11. Lokpal's jurisdiction covers: PM, Union Ministers, MPs, and Group A/B/C/D central government officials. [S2]
  12. Article 105(2) grants MPs immunity for speeches/votes; the Narasimha Rao (1998) SC case held this does not cover bribery to vote/speak. [S2]
  13. States are mandated to establish Lokayuktas under the 2013 Act — but implementation varies widely across states. [S2]
  14. The complaint against Moitra was originally filed by BJP MP Nishikant Dubey and advocate Jai Dehadrai. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper(s): Primarily GS-II; secondary GS-IV

Syllabus Heading Relevance
GS-II: Statutory bodies — structure, powers, functioning Lokpal's composition, jurisdiction, sanction mechanism
GS-II: Important aspects of governance — transparency, accountability Accountability of elected representatives; parliamentary ethics
GS-II: Role of judiciary HC/SC judicial review of Lokpal's quasi-judicial decisions
GS-IV: Probity in governance; Ethics in public life Cash-for-query as corruption in constitutional office

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, 2013 was envisioned as a transformative anti-corruption institution, yet its journey has been marked by procedural and operational challenges. Critically examine, with reference to recent developments." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "The cash-for-query case involving Mahua Moitra raises questions about parliamentary privilege, ethical conduct of representatives, and institutional accountability. Discuss the interplay of constitutional provisions and statutory mechanisms in such cases." (GS-II/GS-IV, 15 marks) 3. "Should the power to grant prosecution sanction for elected representatives vest with the Lokpal or with Parliament? Critically evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of the current arrangement." (GS-II, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 (amended 2018) Primary statute under which the CBI chargesheet would be filed; defines bribery by public servants
Parliamentary Privileges (Article 105/194) Immunity v/s accountability of MPs; the Narasimha Rao ruling is directly relevant
Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) — legal basis & independence CBI derives powers from DSPE Act, 1946; Lokpal's sanction overrides Section 6A thereof
Ethics Committee of Lok Sabha First institutional filter in parliamentary misconduct; recommended Moitra's expulsion
Lokayuktas — State-level anti-corruption bodies Constitutionally analogous; compare with Lokpal for federal accountability architecture
Second Administrative Reforms Commission (2005–08) report on Ethics in Governance Foundational policy background for Lokpal's design
Judicial Review of quasi-judicial bodies HC's jurisdiction to set aside Lokpal orders; scope of writ jurisdiction under Articles 226/227

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Lokpal ≠ Lokayukta: Lokpal is the central anti-corruption ombudsman (statutory body under a 2013 Act); Lokayuktas are state-level bodies — their establishment and powers vary by state law. Many aspirants conflate the two.
  2. Lokpal is not a constitutional body: It is a statutory body (created by an Act of Parliament), unlike the CAG or Election Commission which have constitutional backing. Do not attribute Articles 315 or 338-type constitutional status to it.
  3. Appointment confusion: The Selection Committee chair is the Prime Minister — not the President. The President appoints on the Committee's recommendation but does not chair the selection.
  4. Article 105 immunity is not absolute: A common error is assuming MPs have blanket immunity for all acts in Parliament. The P.V. Narasimha Rao (1998) SC ruling (and the 2024 reconsideration in Sita Soren case by a 7-judge bench) clarified that bribery to perform parliamentary duties is not protected by Article 105(2).
  5. Chronology trap — Moitra's expulsion date: She was expelled in December 2024 (not at the time of the original allegation in 2023). The case dates: allegation (2023) → Ethics Committee report & expulsion (December 2024) → Lokpal sanction (November 2025) → HC quash (December 2025) → HC gives 2 months (January 2026) → SC stay (March 2026).

11. Sources