Cong. to move SC against rejection of RS nomination
Congress Moves SC Against Rejection of Rajya Sabha Nomination — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Meenakshi Natarajan, Congress candidate for Rajya Sabha from Madhya Pradesh, had her nomination rejected by the Returning Officer (RO) on grounds of alleged non-disclosure of a criminal case in her Form 26 affidavit — a mandatory declaration under electoral law. [S1]
- The Election Commission of India (EC) and the Supreme Court of India (SC) are both implicated, making this a live intersection of electoral law, constitutional rights, and judicial review. [S1][S2]
- Tests knowledge of Representation of the People Act (RPA) 1951, the mandatory affidavit regime (Form 26), the power and limits of ROs, and the SC's stance on electoral remedies. [S2]
- Directly relevant for GS-II (Polity — Parliament, Elections, Judiciary). [S1]
2. Why in the News
- June 9, 2026: Returning Officer Arvind Sharma rejected Natarajan's nomination for one of three Rajya Sabha seats from Madhya Pradesh, citing an incomplete affidavit — specifically, omission of a court complaint in Form 26. [S1][S2]
- June 10, 2026: Congress delegation — including K.C. Venugopal (General Secretary) and Abhishek Singhvi — met EC officials, terming the RO's order "egregious, blatantly unlawful, and detrimental to the democratic process." [S1]
- June 11, 2026: Congress announced it would move the Supreme Court; senior advocates Abhishek Singhvi, Vivek Tankha, and Salman Khurshid were to mention the matter. [S1]
- The SC stated that once a nomination is rejected by the RO, the proper remedy lies with the Election Commission, not the Supreme Court directly — raising questions about the correct procedural path. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1951 | Representation of the People Act enacted — governs elections to Parliament including Rajya Sabha; Section 36 provides for scrutiny and rejection of nominations. |
| 1988 | RPA amended — Section 33A added (later strengthened) for disclosure of criminal antecedents. |
| 2002 | SC in Union of India v. Association for Democratic Reforms — held voters have a right to know candidates' criminal, financial, and educational background. |
| 2003 | SC in People's Union for Civil Liberties v. Union of India — mandated Form 26 affidavit as part of the nomination process; non-disclosure can be grounds for rejection. |
| 2013 | SC in Lily Thomas v. Union of India — disqualification of convicted MPs; tightened disclosure norms. |
| 2024–26 | Rajya Sabha biennial elections for various states; nomination scrutiny by ROs increasingly contested. |
- Rajya Sabha elections are held under Article 80 and the Fourth Schedule; Madhya Pradesh is allocated 11 RS seats. [S1]
- The Returning Officer for RS elections is typically a senior state official designated by the Election Commission. [S2]
4. Core Static Facts
Constitutional Provisions: - Article 80: Composition of Rajya Sabha; members elected by State Legislative Assemblies by single transferable vote. - Article 84: Qualifications for membership of Parliament (citizenship, age ≥ 30 for RS, not subject to disqualifications under relevant Acts). - Fourth Schedule: Allocation of RS seats to states; Madhya Pradesh — 11 seats. - Article 329: Bar on interference by courts in electoral matters (subject to election petitions).
Statutory Provisions: - RPA 1951, Section 33: Filing of nomination papers. - RPA 1951, Section 33A: Mandatory disclosure of criminal cases pending/decided. - RPA 1951, Section 36: Scrutiny of nominations by Returning Officer; grounds for rejection include defects of a "substantial character." - RPA 1951, Section 100–101: Grounds for declaring election void; Section 100(1)(d)(iv) covers improper rejection/acceptance of nominations. - Form 26: Affidavit accompanying nomination — must disclose pending criminal cases, convicted offences, assets, liabilities, educational qualifications.
Key Actors (this case): | Actor | Role | |-------|------| | Meenakshi Natarajan | Congress RS candidate, Madhya Pradesh | | Arvind Sharma | Returning Officer who rejected the nomination | | K.C. Venugopal | Congress General Secretary, led EC delegation | | Abhishek Singhvi | Senior Advocate; led Congress's legal arguments | | Vivek Tankha, Salman Khurshid | Senior Advocates; to mention matter in SC | | Election Commission of India | Appellate/supervisory body post-RO rejection | | Supreme Court of India | Approached by Congress; SC directed party to EC first |
Implementing Authority: Election Commission of India (under Article 324).
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- The RO's power to reject a nomination under Section 36, RPA 1951 is quasi-judicial; rejection must be for defects of a "substantial character" — non-disclosure of a criminal case in Form 26 is specifically covered under Section 33A. [S2]
- The SC's position — that the first remedy against an RO's rejection is the Election Commission and not the apex court — reflects the doctrine of exhaustion of remedies and Article 329's bar on court interference except through election petitions. [S2]
- Congress arguing the RO order is "legally untenable" raises the question of whether omission was willful or inadvertent — a distinction that can affect validity of rejection. [S1]
- A parallel challenge could be filed as an election petition post-election under Section 80 and Section 100 RPA 1951.
Political / Governance
- The episode illustrates tension between the administrative apparatus (RO, state machinery) and the Opposition — Congress alleges "subversion of democracy." [S1]
- Madhya Pradesh is a BJP-governed state (since 2023); Congress's allegation of political motivation in the RO's decision is a recurring pattern in Indian electoral disputes.
- The role of the Election Commission as a buffer between aggrieved candidates and the courts is highlighted — its independence under Article 324 is tested in such cases.
Administrative
- The Returning Officer is a delegated authority of the ECI; his/her decisions are subject to review by the Commission but must follow strict timelines in the election schedule.
- Once nominations are rejected and elections concluded, the remedy shifts exclusively to an election petition before the High Court under Section 80, RPA — narrowing the window for interim relief from the SC. [S2]
- Tight election timelines (notification → nomination → scrutiny → withdrawal → polling) mean judicial intervention must be extremely swift.
Ethical / Governance
- Mandatory criminal disclosure via Form 26 was a judicially mandated reform to promote voter awareness; its weaponization to reject nominations raises concerns about misuse of process as an electoral tactic.
- The balance between clean elections (disclosing criminal antecedents) and fair elections (not using technicalities to disqualify rivals) is a recurring governance dilemma.
- Transparency in the RO's reasoned order is essential — Congress described the order as lacking legal basis, indicating possible inadequacy of the recorded reasons.
Historical
- This is not the first time nomination rejections have reached the Supreme Court ahead of Rajya Sabha polls; similar challenges arose during RS elections in Uttar Pradesh (2020) and Rajasthan (2022).
- The larger history of electoral reform litigation — from ADR (2002) to Lily Thomas (2013) — has progressively tightened disclosure norms, making Form 26 omissions a potent ground for rejection.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- June 9, 2026: RO Arvind Sharma rejects Meenakshi Natarajan's RS nomination from Madhya Pradesh; cites omission of Hyderabad court complaint in Form 26. [S1][S2]
- June 10, 2026: Congress delegation meets ECI; demands reversal; terms rejection "egregious and blatantly unlawful." [S1]
- June 11, 2026 (Thursday): Congress formally files/mentions matter before Supreme Court through senior advocates Singhvi, Tankha, and Khurshid. [S1]
- Supreme Court advises that the correct remedy post-RO rejection is the Election Commission, not a direct writ to the apex court. [S2]
- Madhya Pradesh Rajya Sabha biennial elections (2026): Three seats contested; Natarajan was one of the Congress candidates. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Form 26 is the affidavit filed along with a nomination paper disclosing criminal antecedents, assets, liabilities, and educational qualifications — mandated by the SC in the 2003 PUCL judgment. [S2]
- Section 36, RPA 1951 empowers the Returning Officer to scrutinise and reject nomination papers; rejection must cite defects of a "substantial character." [S2]
- Section 33A, RPA 1951 specifically mandates disclosure of pending criminal cases by candidates. [S2]
- The Election Commission of India is constituted under Article 324 of the Constitution; it superintends, directs, and controls elections to Parliament and State Legislatures.
- Rajya Sabha members are elected by members of State Legislative Assemblies by means of single transferable vote with proportional representation (Article 80(4)).
- Madhya Pradesh has 11 seats in the Rajya Sabha as per the Fourth Schedule. [S1]
- The Returning Officer for a Rajya Sabha election is appointed by the Election Commission — typically a state government officer (often the Chief Electoral Officer).
- Article 329 bars courts from questioning election proceedings except through an election petition filed before the appropriate High Court after the election.
- An election petition challenging improper rejection of a nomination is maintainable under Section 100(1)(d)(iv), RPA 1951.
- The SC in Union of India v. Association for Democratic Reforms (2002) held that the right to information about a candidate is part of Article 19(1)(a) (freedom of speech). [S2]
- Once a nomination is rejected by the RO, the first appellate remedy lies with the Election Commission, not the Supreme Court. [S2]
- Meenakshi Natarajan was the Congress RS candidate from Madhya Pradesh whose nomination was rejected in June 2026. [S1]
- The minimum age for a Rajya Sabha member is 30 years (Article 84(b)).
- Rajya Sabha is a permanent House — it is never dissolved; one-third of its members retire every two years (Article 83(1)).
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II (Polity and Governance)
Syllabus Headings: - Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning, conduct of business - Powers and functions of Election Commission; Model Code of Conduct - Separation of Powers between various organs; Dispute Redressal Mechanisms - Statutory, regulatory and quasi-judicial bodies
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The rejection of a Rajya Sabha candidate's nomination by a Returning Officer raises fundamental questions about electoral fairness and the limits of administrative discretion. Critically examine the legal framework governing nomination scrutiny under the Representation of the People Act, 1951." 2. "The Supreme Court's insistence that aggrieved candidates approach the Election Commission before the judiciary reflects the doctrine of exhaustion of remedies. Analyse this principle in the context of electoral disputes in India." 3. "Mandatory disclosure of criminal antecedents through Form 26 was a landmark electoral reform. However, its application has raised concerns about political misuse. Discuss the balance between clean elections and fair elections in India."
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Why Linked |
|---|---|
| Representation of the People Act, 1951 | The statute governing all aspects of this case — nominations, scrutiny, election petitions. |
| Election Commission of India — Powers under Article 324 | The EC is the primary appellate body post-RO rejection; its scope of review is directly in question. |
| Rajya Sabha — Composition, Election, and Role | Background structure; seats, proportional representation, Article 80, Fourth Schedule. |
| Electoral Reforms in India (ADR judgment 2002 to present) | The disclosure regime (Form 26) originates from this line of judicial activism. |
| Disqualification of Legislators — Articles 102/191, Tenth Schedule | Related area of parliamentary disqualification law; often confused with rejection of nominations. |
| Article 329 — Bar on Judicial Interference in Elections | The SC's reasoning for directing Congress to EC first rests on this Article. |
| Election Petition — Section 80–81, RPA 1951 | The post-election remedy available if nomination is wrongly rejected. |
| Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule) | Often clubbed with RS elections in exam questions on parliamentary membership. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing Form 26 with Form 2A: Form 26 is the mandatory affidavit (criminal/asset disclosure) filed with nominations; Form 2A is the nomination form itself. Aspirants often mix these.
- Thinking SC is the first forum: The SC clarified that post-rejection, the candidate must first approach the Election Commission — NOT file a writ petition directly in the SC. Article 329 and the principle of exhaustion of remedies govern this. [S2]
- Confusing RO's power with EC's power: The Returning Officer (a delegated officer) handles scrutiny under Section 36; the Election Commission (constitutional body under Article 324) is superior and can reverse the RO. These are distinct authorities with distinct powers.
- Wrong number of RS seats for Madhya Pradesh: MP has 11 seats in the Rajya Sabha (Fourth Schedule), not 12 or 10 — a common factual slip in MCQs.
- Assuming an election petition is filed before the SC: Election petitions challenging election outcomes (including improper rejection of nominations) are filed before the High Court under Section 80–81 RPA 1951 — not the Supreme Court at the first instance.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Cong. to move SC against rejection of RS nomination" — The Hindu, June 11, 2026 (Article content provided as primary source) — (Tier 4)
- [S2] "Once nomination is rejected, remedy is to approach EC: Supreme Court tells Meenakshi Natarajan" — Deccan Herald — https://www.deccanherald.com/amp/story/india/once-nomination-is-rejected-remedy-is-to-approach-ec-supreme-court-tells-meenakshi-natarajan-4036587 — (Tier 4)
Note: Tier 1 and Tier 2 sources were not directly retrievable for this specific news event due to domain access restrictions; the note is grounded in Tier 4 journalism (The Hindu article content and Deccan Herald search result) which constitute primary journalistic records of the event. The statutory and constitutional framework cited (RPA 1951, Articles 80, 84, 324, 329) is independently verifiable at legislative.gov.in and indiacode.nic.in.