THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary - April 25, 2018 - Topic 1
Back to the court
With the Rajya Sabha Chairman rejecting the notice given by 64 Opposition members for the
impeachment of the Chief Justice of India, the focus has shifted to the
presiding officer’s power to admit or reject a motion. The Congress,
spearheading the move, is planning to approach the Supreme Court. Section 3 of
the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968, says the presiding officer may admit or refuse
to admit the motion after holding consultations with such persons as he thinks
fit, and considering the material before him.
The law is open to interpretation
on whether he can reject the motion on merits without sending the charges to a
committee for investigation. A common sense view suggests the Chairman has to
apply his mind to the nature of the charge. To argue that he should merely
satisfy himself on the number of signatures appended to the motion and
straightaway constitute a probe committee is unlikely to find judicial favour.
However, it needs a court to delineate the contours of such an interpretation.
Rajya Sabha Chairman and Vice-President M. Venkaiah Naidu held there is little
merit in any of the five charges. He has considered the implications for
judicial independence if an investigation were ordered into charges that he
says are based on mere suspicion and conjecture. He has picked holes in the
motion’s wording, saying the signatories themselves are unsure of the veracity
of the charges.
As for the legal foundation
of his order, Mr. Naidu has cited the Supreme Court ruling in M.
Krishna Swami v. Union of India (1992), which directed the Speaker (or
Chairman) to act with utmost care, circumspection and responsibility and to
keep equally in mind “the seriousness of the imputations, nature and quality of
the record before him, and the indelible chilling effect on the public
administration of justice and the independence of the judiciary in the estimate
of the general public”. He has also gone by Mehar Singh Saini (2010)
to elaborate on the phrase “proved misbehaviour or incapacity”, used in Article
124(4) of the Constitution, the ground for impeachment of a Supreme Court
judge. What is possibly the main charge — that Justice Misra misused his
control over the roster to assign cases selectively with a view to influencing
their outcome — is indeed a serious one. But the question is whether
impeachment is an option in the absence of concrete material to establish this
charge. The Opposition is divided on initiating impeachment proceedings and
there are two views within the Congress itself. Taking the matter to court may
result in a judicial resolution, but it is unlikely to end the controversy over
the functioning of the Supreme Court, an issue that has unfortunately assumed a
very political and polarised character.
Vocabulary
Impeachment: the action of calling into question the integrity or validity of something.
Example: The prosecutor's detailed impeachment of the character
witness
Spearhead: the point of a spear.
Example: Soon it was literally raining spearheads on the assassin.
Synonyms: spear tip, spear point
Approach: a way of dealing with something.
Example: We need a whole new approach to the job
Synonyms: method, procedure, technique, modus operandi
Consultation: the action or process of
formally consulting or discussing.
Example: They improved standards in consultation with consumer
representatives
Synonyms: discussion, dialogue, discourse, debate, negotiation, deliberation
Refuse: matter thrown away or rejected as worthless; trash.
Example: Heaps of refuse
Synonyms: garbage, trash, waste, debris, litter, detritus, dross, dregs
Append: add something as an attachment or supplement.
Example: The results of the survey are appended to this chapter
Synonyms: add, attach, affix, tack on, tag on, subjoin
Straightaway: extending or moving in a
straight line.
Example: Alley hit a sinking line drive to straightaway center
field that got by Day
Implication: the conclusion that can be
drawn from something, although it is not explicitly stated.
Example: The implication is that no one person at the bank is
responsible
Synonyms: suggestion, insinuation, innuendo, hint, intimation, imputation
Veracity: conformity to facts; accuracy.
Example: Officials expressed doubts concerning the veracity of the
story
Synonyms: truthfulness, truth, accuracy, correctness, faithfulness, fidelity
Circumspection: the quality of being wary and
unwilling to take risks; prudence.
Example: Circumspection is required in the day-to-day exercise of
administrative powers
Indelible: making marks that cannot be removed.
Example: If you ask Liberians if they voted, they will proudly
show you their thumb painted with indelible ink, the mark of the voter
Elaborate: involving many carefully arranged parts or details;
detailed and complicated in design and planning.
Example: Elaborate security precautions
Synonyms: complicated, complex, intricate, involved, detailed, painstaking
Establish: set up an organization, system, or set of rules on a firm
or permanent basis.
Example: The British established a rich trade with Portugal
Synonyms: set up, start, initiate, institute, form, found, create, inaugurate
