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BackLegal Experts Say AAP MPs Merger with BJP Won't Violate Anti-Defection Law
Legal Experts Say AAP MPs Merger with BJP Won't Violate Anti-Defection Law
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Times of India4/24/2026Politics2 min readIndia

Legal Experts Say AAP MPs Merger with BJP Won't Violate Anti-Defection Law

Quick Look

  • Legal experts say seven AAP Rajya Sabha MPs joining BJP would not violate the Tenth Schedule as two-thirds of AAP's legislature party (7 of 10 MPs) can legally merge with another party under Section 4(2) of the anti-defection law.
  • Experts noted the arbiter of such disputes—the Speaker—often owes their position to the ruling dispensation, making disqualification difficult.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

The Tenth Schedule was added to the Indian Constitution in 1985 to curb political defections. However, legal experts have long criticized it for being ineffective. Section 4(2) allows two-thirds of a legislature party to merge with another party without facing disqualification, a provision that has been used in several high-profile cases including the Shiv Sena split.

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NEW DELHI: Renowned legal experts highlighted the Tenth Schedule's inability to stop political defections when they acquire the scale of "merger" and said joining of BJP by seven AAP Rajya Sabha MPs led by Raghav Chadha would not fall foul of the anti-defection law, which approves two-thirds of a legislature party to break away and merge with another party.

Senior advocates Mukul Rohatgi, Neeraj Kishan Kaul and Maninder Singh said Section 4(2) of the Tenth Schedule provided that the penalty of disqualification may not arise if two-thirds of the strength of a legislature party in a House approves breaking away from the party on whose ticket they got elected and merged with another party.

Senior advocate A M Singhvi, who as lead advocate in matters where he had opposed and supported such political decisions in SC, said, "The Tenth Schedule says that (i) one political party must merge with another and (ii) two-thirds members of the legislature party must agree to the said merger. SC held that the legislature party and political party cannot be conflated as they are separate entities. Accordingly, mere merger of legislature parties is not sufficient."

AAP had 10 MPs in RS and seven would constitute two-third of its legislature party in the House. However, he said that what is more material is that arbiter of such disputes happens to be the presiding officer/Speaker of a House who owes his position to the ruling dispensation, which makes it difficult to get such MPs/MLAs disqualified under provisions of anti-defection law.

"I have said so many times over last decade that Tenth Schedule is a sterile part of Constitution, which should be repealed and substituted by two lines: Any MP/MLA who defects from the party from which he got elected to House shall cease to be a member of House and must seek re-election," Singhvi said.

Kaul said, "If two-thirds of members of a legislature party approve that a merger has happened of the party, then the merger is deemed to have happened and, therefore, it is a valid defence by them to avoid disqualification in the House." He said in Shiv Sena case, SC had accepted that Section 4(2) of Tenth Schedule was a valid defence in disqualification proceedings.

Rohatgi and Singh said a legislature party was relatable to the House concerned. "If two-thirds of total members of a party in RS decide to merge with another party, it shall be considered a valid merger and will not invite disqualification under the anti-defection law."

In April 2003, an amendment to the Tenth Schedule had barred the earlier prevalent defections arising from splits in the party.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • The merger is likely to be accepted as valid under the Tenth Schedule

    Very likely · Within weeks

  • AAP may challenge the merger or the Speaker's ruling

    Possible · Within weeks

Open Questions

  • Will the Speaker actually rule on this merger?
  • Will AAP challenge the merger?
  • Will this trigger more defections from other parties?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Times of India.

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