SC agrees to hear plea against rejection today
I have sufficient facts. Here is the UPSC study note.
SC Agrees to Hear Plea Against Rejection of Nomination — Meenakshi Natarajan (Rajya Sabha, MP, 2026)
1. At a Glance
- Central event: The Supreme Court of India agreed on 12 June 2026 to hear a plea filed by Congress leader Meenakshi Natarajan challenging the rejection of her nomination papers for the Rajya Sabha biennial election from Madhya Pradesh. [S1]
- Constitutional relevance: Directly engages Articles 80, 84, 102 (Rajya Sabha composition, eligibility, disqualification), Article 329 (bar on court interference during elections), and the Representation of the People Act, 1951 (RPA). [S4]
- Electoral consequence: Natarajan was the sole Congress nominee; her disqualification left three BJP candidates elected unopposed to the RS seats from MP. [S2]
- UPSC significance: Tests intersection of election law, SC jurisdiction, RPA, Form 26 disclosure norms, and the doctrine of election petition as exclusive remedy. [S3]
2. Why in the News
- Triggering event (June 2026): The Returning Officer (RO) for the Rajya Sabha election in Madhya Pradesh rejected Meenakshi Natarajan's nomination papers on the ground that she failed to disclose in her Form 26 affidavit details of a private complaint pending before a court in Hyderabad/Telangana, for which she had received a summons in October 2025 but did not mention it in the nomination affidavit. [S2][S5]
- 12 June 2026: A Bench of Justices Prashant Kumar Mishra and A.S. Chandurkar agreed to hear the plea but declined to grant interim relief staying declaration of results. [S1]
- Outcome: The SC subsequently dismissed the plea, holding that the remedy lies in an election petition post-election, not in pre-election judicial interference. [S3][S4]
- Political consequence: BJP candidates from MP were declared elected unopposed to the Rajya Sabha. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1951 | Representation of the People Act, 1951 enacted — governs elections to Parliament and State Legislatures, including Rajya Sabha. |
| 1961 | Conduct of Elections Rules, 1961 framed — prescribes Form 26 (affidavit on criminal antecedents, assets, liabilities, educational qualifications). |
| 2002 | Association for Democratic Reforms v. Union of India — SC mandated disclosure of criminal, financial, and educational background by candidates. |
| 2003 | Form 26 (affidavit) made mandatory for all candidates by amending the Conduct of Elections Rules, 1961. |
| 2013 | PUCL v. Union of India — SC upheld the right of voters to receive information; reinforced mandatory disclosure. |
| 2025 (Oct) | Natarajan receives summons from a Hyderabad court in a private complaint — this fact is allegedly omitted from her Form 26. |
| June 2026 | Nomination rejected by RO → plea filed in SC → SC hears but declines interim relief → plea dismissed; election petition route indicated. |
4. Core Static Facts
Rajya Sabha Elections — Key Framework
- Governing provision: Article 80 of the Constitution; RPA, 1951, Part IV (Sections 29–75) and Conduct of Elections Rules, 1961.
- Eligibility (Article 84): Indian citizen, at least 30 years of age, subscribed to oath under Third Schedule, not disqualified under Article 102 or RPA.
- Disqualification (Article 102): Office of profit, unsound mind, undischarged insolvent, not a citizen, anti-defection (Tenth Schedule).
- Nomination scrutiny: Conducted by the Returning Officer under Section 36, RPA, 1951 — RO may reject on grounds of substantial defect in nomination or affidavit.
- Form 26: Mandatory affidavit under Rule 4A, Conduct of Elections Rules, 1961 — requires disclosure of all pending criminal cases (including cases where only notice/summons received).
- Rejection for non-disclosure: Non-disclosure of a pending criminal matter in Form 26 constitutes a substantial defect enabling rejection under Section 36(2), RPA.
- Remedy after election: Section 100, RPA — grounds for declaring election void; exclusive remedy via election petition before High Court.
- Bar on judicial interference: Article 329(b) — no court shall question the validity of any election except by election petition; applied by SC to decline interim stay. [S4]
- Implementing ministry: Ministry of Law and Justice (Legislative Department); Election Commission of India administers elections.
- Rajya Sabha seats from MP: Multiple biennial vacancies; BJP-dominant state assembly makes Congress nomination strategically significant.
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 329(b) creates an absolute bar on courts interfering in ongoing elections — SC bench applied this doctrine to refuse interim stay. [S3][S4]
- The election petition route under Section 80, RPA is the exclusive and adequate remedy post-election; pre-election writ jurisdiction is severely curtailed.
- Non-disclosure in Form 26 of even a private complaint at summons stage (not conviction or charge-framing) sufficed for rejection — reflects strict interpretation of disclosure norms.
- Section 36(2)(b), RPA, 1951 empowers RO to reject nomination for defect of a "substantial character" — judicial review of this power is narrow.
Political / Governance
- Sole opposition candidate's disqualification resulted in uncontested BJP win — raises questions about fairness of nomination scrutiny and potential misuse of procedural grounds.
- Congress indicated it will challenge via election petition in High Court — outcome could set precedent on what constitutes a "material omission" in Form 26.
- Reinforces the importance of meticulous affidavit compliance even for experienced politicians.
Ethical / Governance
- Voter's right to information (ADR judgment, 2002) is the rationale behind Form 26 — however, penalising a candidate for non-disclosure of an unproven complaint at summons stage raises due process concerns.
- Fine line between enforcing transparency and using procedural compliance as a political tool.
Historical / Precedential
- Pattern of nomination challenges before SC increasing in recent electoral cycles — courts consistently invoke Article 329 to direct parties to election petition route.
- Kalpana Mehta v. Union of India (2018): SC reaffirmed limits of its jurisdiction in electoral matters, preferring HC election petitions.
Administrative
- Returning Officer's role is quasi-judicial; RO decision on nomination is the first point of adjudication — subject to limited scrutiny review.
- Election Commission of India issues Model Code of Conduct and oversees Rajya Sabha biennial elections through state-level machinery.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- October 2025: Meenakshi Natarajan receives summons from a Hyderabad/Telangana court in a private complaint — does not disclose this in her subsequent Form 26. [S2][S5]
- June 2026 (pre-12th): Rajya Sabha biennial election announced for Madhya Pradesh; Natarajan files nomination as sole Congress candidate.
- ~10–11 June 2026: RO scrutinises nomination; rejects Natarajan's papers for non-disclosure of pending court matter. [S2]
- 12 June 2026: SC Bench (Justices Prashant Kumar Mishra & A.S. Chandurkar) agrees to hear plea but refuses interim stay on result declaration. [S1]
- 12 June 2026 (same day): SC dismisses the plea, stating remedy lies in election petition; BJP candidates elected unopposed. [S3][S4]
- Post-12 June 2026: Congress announces intention to file election petition before the Madhya Pradesh High Court once results are formally notified. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)
- Article 329(b) of the Constitution bars courts from questioning the validity of an election except by way of election petition.
- Section 36(2), RPA, 1951 empowers the Returning Officer to reject a nomination on grounds of a substantial defect.
- Form 26 is prescribed under Rule 4A, Conduct of Elections Rules, 1961 — mandatory affidavit for all candidates disclosing criminal cases, assets, liabilities, and educational qualifications.
- Rajya Sabha minimum age requirement: 30 years (Article 84).
- Election petition under Section 81, RPA, 1951 must be filed before the High Court (not the Supreme Court) within 45 days of publication of the result.
- Grounds for rejection of nomination include: not qualified, disqualified, defects in nomination form, or substantial defect in the affidavit (Form 26).
- Association for Democratic Reforms v. Union of India (2002): Landmark SC ruling mandating candidate disclosure; led to Form 26.
- The bench that agreed to hear the Natarajan plea comprised Justices Prashant Kumar Mishra and A.S. Chandurkar. [S1]
- Meenakshi Natarajan is a Congress leader; the election was for Rajya Sabha seats from Madhya Pradesh. [S1]
- The ground for rejection was failure to disclose a private complaint pending before a Hyderabad court in which she had received a summons in October 2025. [S2]
- SC declined to grant interim relief preventing declaration of the result despite agreeing to hear the plea. [S1]
- Article 80 of the Constitution provides for the composition of the Rajya Sabha (Council of States).
- Rajya Sabha elections are conducted by the Election Commission of India through single transferable vote with open ballot for states with >1 vacancy; single candidate constituencies may be uncontested.
- Non-disclosure of a matter at the summons stage (before charge-framing) was treated as sufficient ground for rejection — strict application of Form 26 norms. [S5]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers: - GS-II: Indian Constitution — Parliament, Elections, Judiciary; Representation of the People Act; Role of Election Commission.
Specific Syllabus Headings: - Salient features of the Representation of the People Act - Structure, organisation and functioning of the Supreme Court - Election laws and electoral reforms
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
-
"Article 329 of the Constitution severely curtails judicial intervention in electoral processes. Critically examine the provision in light of the Meenakshi Natarajan Rajya Sabha nomination case (2026)." (GS-II)
-
"The mandatory affidavit (Form 26) regime in Indian elections is both a transparency tool and a potential instrument of electoral exclusion. Discuss with examples." (GS-II)
-
"Examine the powers of the Returning Officer under Section 36 of the Representation of the People Act, 1951. To what extent are these powers amenable to judicial review?" (GS-II)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Representation of the People Act, 1951 | Core statute governing all aspects of nomination, rejection, election petition — foundational to this case. |
| Election Commission of India — Powers & Functions | ECI oversees Rajya Sabha elections; understanding its quasi-judicial role vis-à-vis RO decisions. |
| Article 329 — Bar on Judicial Interference in Elections | The doctrine applied by SC to refuse stay; key constitutional provision for electoral disputes. |
| Disqualification of MPs — Articles 102 & 191 | Grounds for disqualification of sitting members; complements pre-election eligibility norms. |
| Electoral Bonds Case (2024) | SC's expanding role in electoral transparency; contrast with Article 329 restraint in election challenges. |
| Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule) | Another major ground for disqualification of elected representatives; frequently tested alongside Article 102. |
| Election Petition Procedure (Sections 80–115, RPA) | The prescribed remedy post-election; how courts adjudicate disputed elections. |
| Rajya Sabha — Composition, Powers, and Biennial Elections | Static background needed to understand the political and constitutional context of this case. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing the remedy forum: Election petitions challenging Rajya Sabha elections go to the High Court (not SC directly) under Section 80A, RPA — SC has only appellate jurisdiction.
- Thinking Article 329 applies only after election: Article 329(b) bars court interference at any stage of an ongoing election process — even pre-result challenges are severely restricted.
- Conflating "rejection of nomination" with "disqualification": Rejection under Section 36 is an RO's administrative/quasi-judicial act; disqualification under Article 102 is a separate, post-election mechanism.
- Form 26 scope: Aspirants often think Form 26 only covers convicted criminal cases; in fact it requires disclosure of all pending cases, including those at the summons/notice stage.
- Wrong ministry: Election laws (RPA) fall under Ministry of Law and Justice, not Ministry of Home Affairs; elections are conducted by the Election Commission of India (an autonomous constitutional body), not by the ministry.
11. Sources
- [S1] "SC agrees to hear plea against rejection today" — The Hindu, 12 June 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-06-12/th_international/articleGRRG3QOUQ-14919188.ece — (Tier 4; article excerpt provided as primary source)
- [S2] "Supreme Court Refuses to Intervene in Meenakshi Natarajan Nomination Rejection; BJP Candidates Elected Unopposed" — PingTV India — https://www.pingtvindia.com/mp-rajya-sabha-election-sc-ruling/ — (Tier 4 equivalent)
- [S3] "SC dismisses Natarajan plea against RS nomination rejection: 'Remedy lies elsewhere'" — The Federal — https://thefederal.com/category/news/supreme-court-refuses-to-intervene-meenakshi-natarajan-rajya-sabha-nomination-rejection-ec-246371 — (Tier 4 equivalent)
- [S4] "Supreme Court Refuses To Revive Meenakshi Natarajan's Rajya Sabha Nomination, Says Remedy Lies In Election Petition" — LawBeat — https://lawbeat.in/top-stories/supreme-court-refuses-to-revive-meenakshi-natarajans-rajya-sabha-nomination-says-remedy-lies-in-election-petition-1601300 — (Tier 4 equivalent)
- [S5] "Why SC refused to intervene in Congress leader Meenakshi Natarajan's Rajya Sabha nomination rejection" — The Week — https://www.theweek.in/news/india/2026/06/12/why-sc-refused-to-intervene-in-congress-leader-meenakshi-natarajans-rajya-sabha-nomination-rejection.html — (Tier 4 equivalent)
- [S6] "Rajya Sabha Candidature Disqualification: Rules, Laws & Form 26" — InsightsOnIndia — https://www.insightsonindia.com/2026/06/11/the-disqualification-of-rajya-sabha-candidature/ — (Reference/background)