"We will send a proposal to the state government immediately after we get the operative part of the Supreme Court judgement.
"After getting the nod from the government, the process of holding the (panchayat) polls, which had been put on hold in view of the apex court hearing the petition, will be set in motion once again," Haryana State Election Commissioner Rajeev Sharma said over telephone.
The apex court today upheld the validity of recent amendments in a Haryana law which fixes various criteria including minimum educational qualification for candidates contesting panchayat polls.
The petition had challenged validity of Haryana's Panchayati Raj (amendment) Act 2015 which fixes matriculation as essential qualification for general candidates contesting panchayat polls.
As the matter was pending before the Supreme Court, the SEC had decided to put on hold all the activities in pursuant to Commission's notification dated September 8 and all other notifications/orders issued subsequently, Sharma said.
According to the programme, the panchayat polls were to be conducted in three phases - October 4, 11 and 18.
Meanwhile, ruling BJP in the state has hailed the Supreme Court verdict.
"The Supreme Court verdict on the panchayat poll issue has proved that Haryana Government's thought and direction of work are correct," State Health Minister Anil Vij tweeted.
(REOPENS DES10)
Hooda had earlier said that before fixing minimum educational criteria for contestants of panchayat polls, the BJP government in the state and at the Centre should do the same for MPs and MLAs.
"Everyone has to abide by the Supreme Court ruling, but our reservation was with the government. The BJP government should not have shown hurry in fixing minimum qualification criteria as it will debar nearly 70 per cent candidates from contesting.
"The government should have first sought people's view on this before moving ahead," party's state unit president Ashok Arora said.
However, 33-year-old Sunil Jaglan, the man behind 'Selfie with Daughter' campaign and the Sarpanch of village Bibipur, termed it as a "historic" verdict.
"Educated sarpanches will not be at the mercy of bureaucrats and effectively implement government schemes," Jaglan said.
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