2019 Karnataka political crisis explained

The 2019 Karnataka political crisis was a period of political instability when members of the legislative assembly in the Indian State of Karnataka submitted their resignations, which led to the fall of the Congress-JD(S) coalition government in the state.[1] [2]

Date:July 2019
Place:Karnataka, India
Type:Parliamentary crisis
Cause:Resignation of 17 legislators
Outcome:
Participants:

Background

In the 2018 elections to the Karnataka Legislative Assembly, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) won the most seats, 104,[3] but the Indian National Congress (INC) and Janata Dal (Secular) (JD(S)) formed a coalition government with 120 out of 224 seats.[4] In the 2019 general election, the BJP-led NDA won 25 out of 28 seats in Karnataka[5] while the INC-led UPA won two and the Independent Candidate won one.

Resignations

On 1 July, two members, Ramesh Jarkiholi and Anand Singh of the INC submitted their resignations. Over the next few days, ten INC and three JD(S) legislators resigned.[6]

The reaction of the coalition government was to attempt to convince the legislators who had submitted their resignations to rescind them. Many of the legislators fled to Mumbai, and directed the police not to permit INC leaders to meet them. The government also attempted to induce the legislators to return by offering them cabinet posts; all 21 INC ministers resigned on 8 July to ensure that a sufficient number of ministerial berths were available.[7] It also requested that the speaker should disqualify those who had resigned under anti-defection legislation.[8]

The speaker, K. R. Ramesh Kumar, did not immediately accept the resignations, on grounds that he was constitutionally obliged to scrutinize them.[9] Consequently, some of those who had submitted their resignations approached the Supreme Court, which on 12 July agreed to hear the case on 16 July, whilst ordering the speaker not to disqualify any lawmakers or take any other action in this connection.[10]

At the 16 July hearing, Mukul Rohatgi, counsel for the legislators who had submitted their resignations, said that the speaker should be ordered to rule immediately on the resignations.[11] Rohatgi argued that disqualification was a "mini-trial", and so a decision on the resignations should take priority over one on disqualification. Rajeev Dhavan, who appeared for the Chief Minister of Karnataka, argued that the legislators never met the speaker, and consequently the speaker should rule on their disqualifications first.[12] Ranjan Gogoi, the Chief Justice, said that the court would have to balance two competing claims: first, the excuse of resignation could not be used to circumvent anti-defection measures; but, second, claims of defection should not be used to prevent resignation. He also said that the court would have to consider the extent to which it is permitted to issue directions to holders of other constitutional posts, such as that of the speaker of the assembly.

Members responsible for the Crisis

14 INC and 3 JD(S) legislators were responsible for the political crisis. One Karnataka Pragnyavantha Janatha Party legislator also left the coalition government. A few days later, INC legislator Ramalinga Reddy withdrew his resignation.[13]

List of disqualified legislators

S.NoConstituencyMemberParty2019 by-election results[14]
1. RanebennurR. ShankarKarnataka Pragnyavantha Janatha PartyDid not contest. Won by BJP candidate Arunkumar Guththur
2. ShivajinagarR. Roshan BaigIndian National CongressDid not contest. Won by INC candidate Rizwan Arshad
3. Maski (ST)Pratap Gowda PatilLost to INC candidate Basanagouda Turvihal
4. HoskoteLost to Independent candidate Sharath Kumar Bachegowda
5. KagawadShrimant Balasaheb PatilWon back seat as BJP candidate
6. KrishnarajapuramByrati Basavaraj
7. Rajarajeshwari NagarMunirathna
8. S. T. Somashekhar
9. GokakRamesh Jarkiholi
10. Anand Singh
11. HirekerurB. C. Patil
12. AthaniMahesh Kumathalli
13. ChikkaballapurDr. K. Sudhakar
14. YellapurArbail Shivaram Hebbar
15. Mahalakshmi LayoutK. GopalaiahJanata Dal (Secular)
16. KrishnarajpetNarayana Gowda
17. HunsurAdagur H. VishwanathLost to INC candidate H. P. Manjunath

Reaction and conclusion

The INC members in the Rajya Sabha forced adjournments twice in protest,[15] alleging bribery on the part of the BJP.[16] The BJP demanded that the government should resign.[17]

Eventually the Congress-JD(S) coalition was reduced to 101 seats, whilst the BJP retained 105. After three weeks of turmoil, Kumarasamy lost a trust vote and resigned. On 26 July 2019, B. S. Yediyurappa was sworn in as Chief Minister of Karnataka once again.

Vote of confidence
Head Count →23 July 2019
Yes
No
Could not attend
Government resigned thereafter

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Rebel-rousing in the Congress. Gowda. Aravind. 5 July 2019. India Today. 15 July 2019.
  2. News: Karnataka crisis: Congress steps up efforts to persuade MLA to withdraw resignation from assembly. 14 July 2019. Times of India. 15 July 2019. Press Trust of India.
  3. News: Who should get first call to form govt in Karnataka? Jury's out. 16 May 2018. Times of India. TNN (Times News Network).
  4. News: From results to resort politics: how Karnataka formed its government. May 2018. The Hindu. 15 July 2019.
  5. News: As it happened Karnataka Lok Sabha results 2019: highlights. 23 May 2019. The Hindu. 2019-07-15. en-IN. 0971-751X.
  6. News: "Serious threat" From Congress Leaders, No Intention Of Meeting Them: Rebel Karnataka MLAs Tell Police. 15 July 2019. Outlook India. 15 July 2019.
  7. News: All 21 Karnataka Congress Ministers resign to make way for new Cabinet. 2019-07-08. The Hindu. 15 July 2019. en-IN. 0971-751X.
  8. News: Karnataka crisis: Congress seeks disqualification of rebel MLAs; one more quits. 9 July 2019. Times of India. 16 July 2019. Press Trust of India.
  9. News: Karnataka political crisis updates: Need to ensure resignations are genuine and voluntary, says the Speaker. 11 July 2019. The Hindu. 15 July 2019.
  10. News: SC directs status quo in Karnataka MLA resigning case, next hearing July 16. Aryan. Aashish. 2019-07-12. Business Standard India. 2019-07-15.
  11. News: Speaker should 'decide now' on resignations, Karnataka MLAs tell Supreme Court. 16 July 2019. The Telegraph. 16 July 2019. Press Trust of India. Calcutta.
  12. News: Karnataka crisis live: speaker says working as per Constitution, Supreme Court order tomorrow. 16 July 2019. The Economic Times. 16 July 2019.
  13. News: 2019-07-19. Ramalinga Reddy withdraws resignation. en-IN. The Hindu. 2021-07-30. 0971-751X.
  14. Web site: Karnataka bypoll results Highlights: BJP wins 12 out of 15 seats; state Congress leaders quit posts. 2021-07-30. The Economic Times. en.
  15. News: Das. Shaswati. Rajya Sabha adjourned twice over Karnataka crisis. 9 July 2019. Livemint. 15 July 2019.
  16. News: BJP 'buying' MLAs in Karnataka. 6 July 2019. Times of India. 15 July 2019.
  17. News: Karnataka crisis: 21 Congress ministers resign; BJP wants Kumaraswamy to step down. 8 July 2019. India Today. 15 July 2019.