GS 2: GovernanceGS 2: Polity
What is the legal status of right to vote?, Pg8
The Supreme Court is hearing challenges to the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in Bihar, reigniting debate over the legal status of the right to vote in India — whether it is a statutory, constitutional, or fundamental right.
Key Highlights:
- The right to vote in India is currently a statutory right, not a constitutional or fundamental right.
- Article 326 of the Constitution provides for universal adult suffrage but is operationalized via statutory laws.
- Section 62 of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 grants voting rights to those on the electoral roll, with some disqualifications.
- Multiple Supreme Court rulings have reiterated the statutory status of this right, including in Kuldip Nayar (2006) and Anoop Baranwal (2023).
- Justice Ajay Rastogi, in his partial dissent in Anoop Baranwal, argued the right to vote flows from Article 326 and is linked to Article 19(1)(a).
Detailed Insights:
1. Types of Rights:
- Natural Rights: Inherent (e.g., life, liberty); not directly enforceable unless included in fundamental rights.
- Fundamental Rights: Enshrined in Part III of the Constitution; enforceable via Article 32.
- Constitutional Rights: Found in Constitution but outside Part III (e.g., property, trade)
- Statutory Rights: Created and regulated by legislation (e.g., MGNREGA, NFSA, Forest Rights Act).
2. Constitutional Provision:
- Article 326 grants voting rights to all citizens ≥18 years of age, not otherwise disqualified.
- RP Act, 1950: Section 16 disqualifies non-citizens; Section 19 sets age and residency criteria.
- RP Act, 1951: Section 62 grants right to vote if on the electoral roll; disqualifies prisoners and those disqualified under law.
3. Judicial Interpretation:
- N.P. Ponnuswami (1952): Right to vote is a statutory right.
- Jyoti Basu (1982): Reiterated the same view.
- PUCL (2003): Justice P.V. Reddy hinted it may be a constitutional right.
- Kuldip Nayar (2006): Constitution Bench reaffirmed statutory status.
- Raj Bala (2015): Division Bench noted it as constitutional, referencing PUCL.
- Anoop Baranwal (2023): Majority reaffirmed statutory status; dissent by Justice Rastogi linked it to freedom of expression and basic structure.
4. Dissenting View (Justice Rastogi):
- Right to vote is an expression under Article 19(1)(a).
- Free and fair elections are part of the basic structure, thus voting is integral.
- Although shaped by statute, voting rights originate from Article 326, warranting constitutional status.
Key Concepts Involved:
- Article 326: Provides for universal adult suffrage as the basis for elections to the House of the People and State Legislative Assemblies.
- Statutory vs. Constitutional Right: A statutory right is based on legislation; a constitutional right is derived directly from the Constitution.
- Article 19(1)(a): Guarantees freedom of speech and expression — used in the argument for elevating voting as an expressive right.