Karnataka Assembly speaker K. R. Ramesh Kumar on Sunday disqualified 14 more rebel MLAs under the anti-defection law, until the end of the assembly term in 2023. On Monday, July 29, chief minister B. S. Yediyurappa will seek the trust vote in the assembly to prove his majority.
Eleven Congress MLAs and three JDS lawmakers faced the axe from the speaker, who pronounced his ruling at a hurriedly called news conference, two days after Yediyurappa took oath as chief minister, after the collapse of the Congress-JDS coalition government.
The Speaker's action would have no bearing on the fate of the Yediyurappa government, as the disqualification of the errant MLAs with immediate effect, their absence would reduce the effective strength of the House, making it a smooth affair for the BJP.
The absence of 20 MLAs -- 17 rebels, one legislator each from the Congress and the BSP, and one independent legislator -- during a vote on the confidence motion moved by the Congress-JDS coalition government, headed by H. D. Kumaraswamy, had led to the government's collapse after weeks of murky drama.
With the disqualification of 17 rebel MLAs -- 14 from the Congress and three from JDS -- on Sunday, the effective strength of the 224-member assembly, excluding the Speaker, who has a casting vote in case of a tie, is now 207. The magic figure required will be 104.
BJP along with the support of one independent has 106 members, Congress 66 (including nominated members), JD(S) 34 and one BSP member, who has been expelled by the party for not voting for the Kumaraswamy government during the trust vote.
'I have used my judicial conscience... I am 100 per cent hurt' said the Speaker, when asked about his controversial decision on disqualification being called into question and allegations about his conduct in the entire issue.
The Speaker's sudden move also comes with indications from the BJP that it was mulling moving a no-confidence against him if he does not voluntarily give up the post when the assembly meets on Monday.
Kumar said he was taking the action based on the petitions moved by the Congress and JDS to disqualify the rebel MLAs, who had also submitted resignations as assembly members and were absent during the trust vote sought by the H. D. Kumaraswamy headed government, leading to its downfall.
He said he had rejected the request by the rebel MLAs to give him four weeks more to appear before him on the issues of their resignations and disqualification plea against them.
The Speaker had made it clear when he disqualified three rebel MLAs earlier that a member disqualified under the anti-defection law cannot contest or get elected till the end of the term of the present House, a contention which has been challenged by the BJP, rebel MLAs and several legal experts.
Reading out the names of errant MLAs, the speaker said, 'They cease to be MLAs with immediate effect till the expiry of the 15th assembly (in 2023).' He added: 'With responsibility and fear I have taken this decision.'
'The way I am being pressurised mentally as Speaker to deal with all these things, I am pushed into a sea of depression,' said an emotional Kumar.
The disqualified MLAs are: Pratap Gowda Patil, B. C. Patil, Shivram Hebbar, S. T. Somashekar, Byrati Basavaraj, Anand Singh, Roshan Baig, Munirathna, K. Sudhakar and MTB Nagaraj and Shrimant Patil (all Congress).
Other party MLAs Ramesh Jarkiholi, Mahesh Kumatalli and Shankar were disqualified on Thursday.
JD(S) members who faced action are:Gopalaiah, A H Vishwanath and Narayana Gowda.
The BJP slammed the Speaker's action, calling it 'unfair and violative of the law' which, it said, had been taken 'yielding to the pressure from a party'.
'It is a motivated and defective order,' said senior BJP leader Govind Karjol, adding, the rebels would challenge it in the Supreme Court, where they were certain to 'get justice.'
The MLAs had quit on their own and their resignations should have been accepted, Karjol said.
The Karnataka Congress welcomed the Speaker's decision to disqualify the rebel MLAs.
'The court of the public will also give the appropriate punishment to these legislators who have betrayed their parties and people who voted them by joining hands with BJP to bring down the coalition government,' the party tweeted.
Congress Legislature Party leader Siddarmaiah, in a tweet, termed the Speaker's decision as 'a victory for democracy'.
'I believe this decision will put an end to the shabby culture of selling oneself by disregarding the public mandate for selfish motives and the greed for power,' he said.
JD(S) too, in a tweet, welcoming the Speaker's decision, said, 'the Speaker has sent a strong message to those who tried to uproot democracy by disqualifying legislators who fell for allurements of power and money, disregarded public mandate and violated the party whip.'
The Speaker justified his pronouncing the order swiftly just a day before the session, saying he had do it in view of the assembly meeting on Monday, where the 'specific agenda' was to take up the motion of confidence and pass the crucial appropriation bill.
On the move by the BJP to subject him to the no-confidence motion, the speaker said, 'let it come. You will see how I will behave. I will be in the chair...I will discharge my duties...let's see what happens..'
On the disqualification issue, he said, 'this cannot be a drama and manipulation' and asserted that he had conducted himself in a 'gentlemanly manner' in dealing with the matter.
He said he had also received a complaint against expelled BSP MLA Mahesh, who skipped the trust vote process on Tuesday violating a directive from the party to vote for the Kumaraswamy government.
A bench headed by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi in its order on Wednesday last gave the Assembly Speaker the freedom to decide on the resignation of the 15 MLAs within such time-frame as considered appropriate by him.
It had also ruled that the rebel MLAs cannot be compelled to attend the assembly proceedings.
The Congress and the JD(S) had sought disqualification under the anti-defection law of the rebel lawmakers who, however, were undeterred by it and skipped the assembly proceedings during the crucial confidence vote Tuesday.
76-year old Yediyurappa was sworn in as Chief Minister for a fourth time on Friday in a sudden twist to the protracted high voltage political drama with a big challenge to manage numbers staring him in the face.
Shortly after taking the oath, Yediyurappa had said he would move a motion of confidence in the assembly on July 29 to prove his majority, apparently confident of winning it with the expectation that 16 rebel Congress and JDS MLAs may abstain as they did on Tuesday last, giving him the edge.
He took the oath, two days after the Congress-JDS coalition government crumbled under the weight of a rebellion by a big chunk of its lawmakers, 20 of whom were absent for the voting that led to the defeat of its trust vote by 99-105.
With the MLAs' disqualification, the sailing is expected to be smooth for Yediyurappa in the Assembly on Monday.