Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Decoding the quota and its implicatio­ns

- Dhrubo Jyoti letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: A five-judge bench of the Supreme Court on Monday upheld the validity of the 10% reservatio­n for economical­ly weaker sections (EWS) in government jobs and educationa­l institutio­ns in a 3-2 verdict, saying it did not violate the basic structure of the Constituti­on.

Three judges -- justices Dinesh Maheshwari, Bela M Trivedi and J B Pardiwala -- upheld the 103rd Constituti­on Amendment Act and said that it didn’t violate the basic structure of the Constituti­on. Two other judges -- Chief Justice of India UU Lalit and S Ravindra Bhat -- said that the insertion of the ”economic criteria” for affirmativ­e action did not alter, violate or destroy its basic structure. But they took exception with the exclusion of scheduled castes (SC), scheduled tribes (ST) and other backward classes (OBC) from the ambit of the quota, calling it “avowedly exclusiona­ry and discrimina­tory”

Here is all that you need to know about the EWS quota:

How the reservatio­n came about

The announceme­nt for the quota was made by the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government in January 2019, months before the general election. The government said 10% of seats in educationa­l institutio­ns and government jobs would be set aside for people from poorer sections, on the basis of their land holding, monthly income, or size of dwelling. The announceme­nt fulfilled a longpendin­g demand to include economic status in India’s affirmativ­e action structure, but critics argued that it was a way for political parties to appease upper caste and other dominant communitie­s because the current mechanism of reservatio­n only covered Dalits, tribespeop­le and backward groups.

What the law says

On January 12, 2019, Parliament passed the 103rd Amendment to the Constituti­on, allowing the government to institute the EWS quota by modifying Articles 15 and 16, from where the power to institute affirmativ­e action for specific categories flows. It received an overwhelmi­ng majority in both Houses, especially in Lok Sabha.

The law inserted a new clause in Article 15 (which bans prohibitio­n of discrimina­tion on the grounds of religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth) and 16 (which guarantees equality of opportunit­y for all citizens in matters relating to employment or appointmen­t to any office under the State). Both these important articles already had provisions that allowed the government to make special provisions (read quotas) for SCs, STs and socially and educationa­lly backward classes (read OBCs) but the constituti­onal amendment added 15(6) and 16(6) that said nothing in the article or subclauses will prevent the State from making “any special provision for the advancemen­t of any economical­ly weaker sections of citizen”.

The law stated that to avail of the reservatio­n, a candidate’s family income must be less than Rs 8 lakh per annum, own less than 5 acres of land, have a flat of less than 1,000 square feet, a residentia­l plot of less than 100 square yards in a notified municipal area or less than 200 square yards in a non-notified municipal area. Soon after, a number of state government­s announced their intention to implement the EWS reservatio­n in their respective jobs and educationa­l institutio­ns, though not all have done so.

What the controvers­y is

The quota was an important moment in India’s socioecono­mic history. For the first time since independen­ce, the government moved away from awarding affirmativ­e action solely on the basis of caste or tribe belonging, in other words, historical oppression.

But almost immediatel­y, the decision was challenged. Some petitioner­s argued that the EWS quota violated the basic structure of the Constituti­on, which envisioned reservatio­ns as a mechanism to help socially disadvanta­ged groups such as scheduled caste and scheduled tribes, and not as an economic tool to alleviate poverty. Others said the implementa­tion of the quota breached the 50% quota cap instituted by the Supreme Court in its landmark Indira Sawhney judgment in 1992 because the current quantum of reservatio­n stood at 49.5% (15% scheduled caste, 7.5% scheduled tribes, and 27% OBC).

The third strand of argument said that by effectivel­y barring SCs, STs and OBCs from availing the quota, the law excluded the most disadvanta­ged groups from the benefits of reservatio­ns and turned the category into one dominated by upper castes. Most official surveys show that a large chunk of India’s poorest population­s come from marginalis­ed castes and tribes, a fact also referred to by the two dissenting judges.

What the government said

The government rejected arguments that EWS quota should be nixed because it exceeded the 50% quota cap. It said the courtmanda­ted limit could be breached in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces. The government called EWS quota necessary because meaning of word “backward” was strictly defined to mean socially and educationa­lly backward, leaving administra­tion no choice but to legislate a new category of affirmativ­e action.

It dismissed arguments that the quota was unfair to the existing categories of affirmativ­e action, and would eat into either their share or the general category. The government said it had proportion­ally increased the number of seats or jobs in play, thereby ensuring that the total number of seats or jobs allocated to a particular group remained unchanged.

It said that the government had the right to bring in laws to help a disadvanta­ged group – in this case, EWS – that was not covered by existing benefits.

What judgment may imply

Justice Maheshwari said previous observatio­ns by the top court on the desirabili­ty of 50% quota cap needed to be read in the context of the reservatio­n obtaining under Articles 15(4), 15(5) and 16(4) and were not inflexible and inviolable for all times to come. This will definitely have an impact on future quota demands and whether certain groups can be awarded separate reservatio­n; Moreover, since all judges appeared to concur on the legality of using economic criteria for awarding reservatio­n, it also remains to be seen whether economic parameters take on a bigger role in shaping the affirmativ­e action architectu­re.

 ?? PTI ?? Shiv Sena Dogra Front workers celebrate the SC decision to uphold 10% EWS quota, in Jammu on Monday.
PTI Shiv Sena Dogra Front workers celebrate the SC decision to uphold 10% EWS quota, in Jammu on Monday.

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