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Collegium system here to stay

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
The collegium system of appointment of judges is likely to stay for the time being as Parliament could not pass a constitutional amendment bill in the last session of the Lok Sabha to put in place a new mechanism giving the Executive a say in the matter.

Parliamentary nod to the Judicial Appointments Commission Bill eluded despite government agreeing to the demands by jurists and BJP to grant constitutional status to a proposed commission for appointment and transfer of judges to the higher judiciary to ensure that its composition cannot be altered through an ordinary legislation.

The Winter session of Parliament - the last session of the 15th Lok Sabha - was adjourned sine die on Friday.
 

A previous effort to replace the collegium system in 2003 had also not succeed.

The then NDA government had introduced a Constitution Amendment Bill but the Lok Sabha was dissolved when the bill was before a Standing Committee. Leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha Arun Jaitley was the Law Minister then.

According to the bill, while new Article 124 A of the Constitution will define the composition of JAC, Article 124 B will define its functions.

Before the changes agreed by the Union Cabinet on December 26, the composition of the proposed panel was defined in the Judicial Appointments Commission Bill, 2013 which was introduced along with a separate constitutional amendment bill in Rajya Sabha during the Monsoon session.

The constitutional amendment bill says there will be a JAC but does not say it will be headed by the CJI or mentions the composition and its functions.

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First Published: Feb 23 2014 | 9:40 AM IST

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