Chief Election Commissioner Sunil Arora on Saturday described as 'unsavory (sic)' and 'avoidable' news reports that fellow commissioner Ashok Lavasa had recused himself from meetings related to model code of conduct violations till he is allowed to record his dissent.
He also said that in the last meeting of the commission on May 14, it was 'unanimously' decided to form groups to deliberate issues which arose in the course of conduct of Lok Sabha elections.
'Out of the 13 issues/areas which were identified, model code of conduct is one of them,' Arora said in a statement.
'The three members of the ECI are not expected to (sic) template or clones of each other. There have been so many times in the past when there has been a vast diversion of views as it can and should be. But the same largely remained within the confines of the ECI,' Arora said.
The poll panel's laws suggest preference for an unanimous view, but provide for a majority ruling in the absence of unanimity.
In a strongly-worded letter to Arora on May 4, Lavasa is learnt to have said he was being forced to stay away from meetings of the full commission since minority decisions were not being recorded. He is also learnt to have mentioned that his participation in the meeting would be 'meaningless' as his dissent remained unrecorded.
Lavasa said his notes on the need for transparency have not been responded to, so he had decided to stay away from model code related complaints.
The EC's legal division had opined that dissent cannot be recorded on such decisions as model code violations are not part of a quasi judicial hearing where all the three -- the CEC and two fellow commissioners - sign.
The majority view is conveyed to the parties concerned.The dissent remains recorded in the file only and not made public.
Lavasa had dissented on some of the 11 decisions the EC took on complaints against Prime Minister Narendra Modi and BJP chief Amit Shah for alleged model code violations.
The two were given a clean chit in all the decisions by the poll panel.