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Website Article 22nd September Governor's timeline on bills

Can Timelines Be Fixed for Governors?

Can the Governor withhold assent to a Bill passed by the State legislature based on his own discretion? Why has the Centre said that courts cannot prescribe a timeline for Governors? What role does the President play? What have Opposition-ruled States argued?

The Story So Far

  • The Supreme Court is hearing a May 2025 reference on the interpretation of Articles 200 and 201 of the Constitution.
  • Triggered by Governors of Tamil Nadu and Kerala withholding assent to Bills passed by their legislatures.
  • An April 2025 judgment held:
    • If the Governor withholds assent, he must state reasons within a reasonable time.
  • Current reference: Can the Supreme Court fix timelines for Governors’ action on Bills?

What Does the Constitution Say?

Article 200 – Governor’s Role

Governor may:

  1. Give assent to a Bill.
  2. Withhold assent.
  3. Return the Bill (except a Money Bill) for reconsideration.
  4. Reserve the Bill for the President’s consideration.
  • If a Bill is returned and re-passed, the Governor must assent.

Article 201 – President’s Role

  • For Bills reserved by the Governor:
    • President may assent, withhold, or return the Bill.
    • If re-passed, the President must assent.

No timeline is prescribed in the Constitution for either the Governor or the President.

Recent Trends

  • Growing instances of Governors withholding assent, sparking legal disputes.
  • The Supreme Court has clarified:
    • Governors cannot indefinitely delay decisions.
    • Action must be taken within a reasonable time.
  • Larger Bench reference seeks clarity on whether fixed timelines can be imposed.

Key Notes:

  • Article 200: Governor acts on aid and advice of Council of Ministers, except when reserving Bills for the President.
  • Governor cannot sit indefinitely on Bills.
  • Opposition-ruled States: Delay violates cooperative federalism and undermines State legislatures.
  • Centre’s stand:
    • Constitution does not mandate timelines.
    • Discretion of Governor/President must be respected.
    • Courts cannot prescribe timelines.

Constitutional Principles Involved

  • Article 163(1): Governor to act on aid and advice of Council of Ministers (with some discretionary powers).
  • Supreme Court precedents:
    • Governors must avoid indefinite delay.
    • Courts have suggested “reasonable time” but avoided strict deadlines.
  • Federal balance: Popularly elected State legislatures vs discretionary powers of Governors.

Way Forward

    1. Supreme Court guidelines could ensure timely decisions without rigid deadlines.
  • Balance required between:
    • Governor’s discretionary role, and
    • Autonomy of State legislatures.
  1. Strengthening federal spirit is essential to avoid recurring conflicts.
  2. Possible solution: Define “reasonable time” in practice (e.g., 3–6 months) rather than absolute timelines.
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