It could be argued that creating such preconditions for people seeking to stand for election is contrary to the vision the Indian republic's founders had when they took arguably the greatest gamble in history and advocated that India must have universal suffrage, despite a literacy rate of just 12 per cent. It is hard to imagine what they would have said in response to the bench's observation that "only education gives a human being the power to discriminate between right and wrong, good and bad." It is safe to assume they would have been dismayed as well, not least since they constantly rebutted these sorts of arguments when used by Western governments to deny India and other countries in Asia and Africa self-rule. Many educated people have shown a propensity for wrongdoing, and many uneducated people have shown a nobility of thought and action.
The ideals of August 15, 1947 are worth reiterating. To its very foundations, India's democracy was based on equality. It was a bold bet that one way to rapidly overturn Indian society's deeply ingrained hierarchies was to adopt universal suffrage in a way that neither the American nor French revolutions had the courage or the vision to do. Several decades on, to place minimum qualifications of education on electoral candidates is to dilute that ennobling aspiration.
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