Opposition’s notice against CEC still unacknowledged: O’Brien
Study Note: Opposition's Notice Against CEC — Parliamentary & Constitutional Dimensions
1. At a Glance
- 193 Opposition MPs (130 Lok Sabha + 63 Rajya Sabha) submitted notices on March 12, 2026, seeking removal of Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) Gyanesh Kumar — the largest coordinated parliamentary move against a CEC in recent memory. [S1]
- The CEC is removable only through a process identical to that for a Supreme Court judge under Article 324 of the Constitution — a deliberate constitutional safeguard for the Election Commission's independence. [S2]
- The matter sits at the intersection of GS-II syllabus themes: constitutional bodies, separation of powers, parliamentary procedures, and democratic accountability.
- The episode tests a critical UPSC trap: the difference in removal protection between the CEC and other Election Commissioners (ECs) under the same Article.
2. Why in the News
- March 12, 2026: A combined 10-page notice signed by 130 Lok Sabha MPs and 63 Rajya Sabha MPs was submitted to the Secretariats of both Houses seeking removal of CEC Gyanesh Kumar. [S1]
- Charges in the notice: CEC being "subservient" to the executive; "wilful and deliberate abuse of the powers and position of a constitutional office." [S1]
- March 28, 2026: Trinamool Congress Rajya Sabha leader Derek O'Brien stated that nearly two weeks after submission, both Secretariats had not acknowledged the notice on the floor of Parliament, nor flagged any procedural deficiencies. [S1]
- O'Brien alleged a "tacit understanding" between the government and the CEC, calling the non-acknowledgement a "mockery of Parliament." [S1]
- The Budget Session was scheduled to conclude on April 2, 2026, raising concerns that the notice would lapse without any action. [S1]
- O'Brien also criticised PM Modi for conducting an "all-party meeting" on West Asia instead of debating it on the floor of Parliament, citing accountability evasion. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1950 | Election Commission of India (ECI) established; Article 324 operationalised |
| 1989 | ECI made a multi-member body (two ECs added alongside CEC) — but CEC retained superior removal protection |
| 1993 | T.N. Seshan era: ECI's institutional assertiveness peaked; highlighted need for statutory backing |
| 2023 | Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) Act, 2023 passed — replaced Supreme Court judge-led selection committee with a PM-led panel, removing the CJI [S2] |
| 2023 | Supreme Court (5-judge bench) in Anoop Baranwal v. Union of India directed a collegium including CJI for CEC/EC appointments until Parliament legislated — Parliament thereafter passed the 2023 Act overriding this |
| 2026 | First major parliamentary removal attempt via notices in both Houses against CEC Gyanesh Kumar [S1] |
4. Core Static Facts
Constitutional Provisions
- Article 324: Vests superintendence, direction, and control of elections in the Election Commission of India (ECI).
- Article 324(5): CEC cannot be removed except by an order of the President, after an address by both Houses of Parliament in the same session, supported by:
- (i) majority of total membership of each House, AND
- (ii) not less than two-thirds of members present and voting. [S2]
- Other Election Commissioners (ECs): removable only on the recommendation of the CEC — lesser protection than CEC.
Statutory Framework (2023 Act)
- Full name: The Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) Act, 2023 [S2]
- Selection Committee (post-2023 Act): Prime Minister (Chair), Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha, Cabinet Minister nominated by PM.
- CJI excluded from the selection panel (key controversy). [S2]
- Term: 6 years or age of 65, whichever is earlier; not eligible for re-appointment.
- Salary: Equivalent to Cabinet Secretary (changed from Supreme Court judge — another controversy).
Parliamentary Removal Process
- Notices must be submitted to the Secretariats of both Houses.
- Secretariat scrutinises for procedural deficiencies before placing on floor.
- No statutory timeline mandated for acknowledgement — the procedural gap exploited in the current episode.
- Precedent: No CEC has ever been successfully removed through this process in Indian history.
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 324(5) mirrors Article 124(4) (SC judge removal) — deliberately co-equal constitutional protection. [S2]
- The 2023 Act altered the appointment process but left removal unchanged under Article 324(5). [S2]
- Non-acknowledgement of a valid parliamentary notice raises questions about Speaker/Chairman's duties under Rules of Procedure.
- No writ jurisdiction lies directly over parliamentary proceedings per Article 105 (parliamentary privilege) — limits judicial recourse for the Opposition.
Ethical / Governance
- Structural conflict: CEC appointed by a committee dominated by the ruling government (2-1 majority) under the 2023 Act, raising questions of independence. [S2]
- Non-acknowledgement of the removal notice signals possible Executive influence over parliamentary scheduling — undermines doctrine of separation of powers.
- Opposition's charge of CEC being "subservient" to the executive directly implicates impartiality — a foundational norm for electoral democracy.
- Accountability gap: Parliament's Budget Session ending without addressing the notice = effective shelving without rejection.
Administrative
- Secretariat discretion: Both Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha Secretariats are under the administrative control of the Speaker and Chairman respectively — their role in acknowledging/flagging notices is critical.
- No statutory timeline exists for Presiding Officers to act on removal notices — an institutional gap this episode exposes. [S1]
- ECI's credibility depends on perceived independence; inaction on accountability notices affects institutional trust.
Historical
- 1977: Only serious informal pressure on a CEC (T. Swaminathan) — resigned amid controversy; no formal removal motion.
- 2009 Navin Chawla controversy: Congress-led govt accused of appointing a partisan CEC; BJP threatened removal notice but did not formally file.
- 2026 episode marks a qualitatively new precedent: formal multi-party notices in both Houses, documented and submitted. [S1]
Political / Democratic
- 193 MPs = significant cross-party mobilisation, yet constitutional arithmetic for removal remains high (2/3 majority of those present + absolute majority).
- Opposition's strategy: even if removal fails, the notice creates a public accountability record and pressures the government.
- Derek O'Brien's criticism links ECI accountability to broader parliamentary norm erosion — PM avoiding floor debates, all-party meetings replacing parliamentary scrutiny. [S1]
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- 2023: Parliament passed the CEC & EC (Appointment) Act, 2023 removing the CJI from the selection panel — challenged in Supreme Court. [S2]
- Early 2026: Gyanesh Kumar serving as CEC; appointment itself contested by Opposition as reflecting government bias.
- March 12, 2026: 193-MP joint notice filed in both Houses for removal of CEC Gyanesh Kumar. [S1]
- March 28, 2026: O'Brien publicly flags non-acknowledgement; calls it an accountability crisis. [S1]
- April 2, 2026: Budget Session scheduled to end — deadline pressure on the notice. [S1]
- Ongoing: Supreme Court petitions pending against the 2023 appointment Act. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Article 324(5): CEC can be removed only by Presidential order following address by both Houses in the same session. [S2]
- The removal procedure for the CEC mirrors Article 124(4) — the same process used for Supreme Court judges.
- Other Election Commissioners can be removed only on the recommendation of the CEC — a key asymmetry.
- The CEC and Other ECs (Appointment) Act, 2023 constitutes the current statutory framework for ECI appointments. [S2]
- Under the 2023 Act, the selection committee is chaired by the Prime Minister — the CJI is NOT a member. [S2]
- Term of CEC: 6 years or age of 65, whichever is earlier; no re-appointment. [S2]
- Post-2023 Act, CEC's salary is equivalent to Cabinet Secretary (not Supreme Court judge as earlier). [S2]
- The Anoop Baranwal v. Union of India (2023) Supreme Court judgment directed inclusion of CJI in the appointment panel — Parliament overrode this with the 2023 Act. [S2]
- 193 MPs (130 LS + 63 RS) submitted the removal notice on March 12, 2026. [S1]
- The removal notice remained unacknowledged for nearly two weeks — flagged by Derek O'Brien on March 28, 2026. [S1]
- No CEC has ever been removed through the constitutional process in India's history.
- The Budget Session 2026 was scheduled to conclude on April 2, 2026 — creating a de facto lapse deadline for the notice. [S1]
- Both Secretariats had not flagged procedural deficiencies in the notices, per O'Brien — making non-acknowledgement politically significant. [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II (Indian Polity, Constitution, Governance)
Syllabus Headings: - Structure, organisation and functioning of the Executive and the Judiciary — Ministries and Departments of the Government - Statutory, regulatory and various quasi-judicial bodies - Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning, conduct of business - Important aspects of governance, transparency and accountability
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The constitutional protection afforded to the Chief Election Commissioner under Article 324 is necessary but not sufficient to ensure the Election Commission's independence. Critically examine in light of recent developments." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "The Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment) Act, 2023 has altered the balance between executive control and institutional independence. Analyse its implications for free and fair elections in India." (GS-II, 10 marks) 3. "Discuss the procedural safeguards and gaps in the parliamentary mechanism for removal of constitutional functionaries, with reference to the Chief Election Commissioner." (GS-II, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Why It Connects |
|---|---|
| Election Commission of India — structure and powers | Direct parent institution; Article 324 is the constitutional foundation |
| Removal of constitutional functionaries (SC judges, CAG, UPSC Chairperson) | Comparative removal thresholds under Articles 124(4), 148, 317 |
| CEC & EC (Appointment) Act, 2023 | Current statutory framework; alters appointment but not removal |
| Anoop Baranwal v. Union of India (2023) | Landmark SC ruling on ECI appointments; directly overridden by 2023 Act |
| Parliamentary procedures — Motions, Addresses | Mechanism by which removal notices are processed in both Houses |
| Separation of Powers and Judicial Review | Executive influence over quasi-independent constitutional bodies |
| Model Code of Conduct | ECI's most visible enforcement power; linked to independence debates |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- CEC ≠ Other ECs on removal: Many aspirants incorrectly apply the same removal procedure to all three members of ECI. Only the CEC has the Article 124(4)-equivalent protection; other ECs need only a CEC recommendation. [S2]
- 2023 Act changed appointment, NOT removal: Confusing the statutory change (appointment process) with the constitutional provision (removal under Article 324). Removal still requires the same constitutional threshold.
- "Address" ≠ "Impeachment": The process is an Address by Parliament (not impeachment, which is a US term). Indian Constitution does not use the word "impeach" for the CEC.
- Salary confusion: Post-2023 Act, CEC's salary = Cabinet Secretary, not Supreme Court judge (as it was under the earlier arrangement). This is a common factual trap in MCQs.
- CJI in selection panel: A very common error — the CJI was included in the SC-directed interim arrangement (2023 judgment) but is NOT included in the 2023 Act's selection committee. The two are often conflated.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Opposition's notice against CEC still unacknowledged: O'Brien" — The Hindu, March 28, 2026 — Article content provided as primary excerpt — (Tier 4)
- [S2] PRS Legislative Research — 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 Legislative Brief on CEC & EC Bill 2023 — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/prs-products/prs-legislative-brief-4256 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] Rajya Sabha Secretariat — Chapter 23: Motions and Short Duration Discussions (Rajya Sabha at Work) — https://cms.rajyasabha.nic.in/UploadedFiles/Procedure/RajyaSabhaAtWork/English/796-825/CHAPTER23.pdf — (Tier 1)