Thursday, April 30, 2026

The Burden of Proving One’s Humanity

 How Modern Society Turned Recognition into Performance and Human Relations into Transactions

-Ramphal Kataria

Abstract

The contemporary world suffers not merely from economic inequality but from a profound civilisational crisis of human relations. Trust is collapsing, sincerity is increasingly interpreted as weakness, and deceit has emerged as a celebrated instrument of success within capitalist modernity. The ordinary individual is compelled to constantly prove his morality, loyalty, honesty, and even humanity before systems and relationships structured through transactional logic. This essay develops a analytic critique of this condition by examining how capitalism commodifies not only labour but also consciousness, emotions, identity, and interpersonal relations. Drawing from Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Georg Lukács, Antonio Gramsci, Erich Fromm, and Guy Debord, the essay argues that the modern crisis of trust emerges directly from the alienating structures of late capitalism, where visibility replaces authenticity and performance supersedes substance. Through a critical engagement with Shannon L. Alder’s reflections on self-justification and recognition, this essay analyses the emotional condition of the ordinary individual trapped within validation economies, digital spectacle, competitive social relations, and systemic invisibilisation. It argues that awareness is not a mystical category but a material and historical consciousness capable of exposing the contradictions of capitalist society and restoring human dignity through collective social understanding.

Keywords

Marxism; Alienation; Commodity Fetishism; Consciousness; Late Capitalism; Psychoanalysis; Human Relations; Trust Deficit; Deceit; Social Alienation; Ideology; Emotional Labour; Class Society; Reification; Neoliberalism; Ordinary Man; Validation Economy; Human Dignity; Social Psychology; Capitalist Modernity.

Introduction: The Crisis of Human Recognition in Capitalist Society

One of the defining characteristics of contemporary capitalist society is not merely economic inequality, unemployment, inflation, or technological displacement. The deeper crisis lies in the collapse of trust between human beings themselves. Modern individuals increasingly inhabit a world structured through suspicion, strategic calculation, emotional manipulation, and transactional utility. Human relationships no longer emerge organically from solidarity, mutual recognition, or shared social existence. Instead, they increasingly resemble negotiations within a marketplace where affection, morality, loyalty, identity, and sincerity function as exchangeable commodities.

This condition explains the profound relevance of Shannon L. Alder’s statement:

“Don’t waste your time trying to provide people with proof of deceit, in order to keep their love, win their love or salvage their respect for you. The truth is this: If they care they will go out of their way to learn the truth. If they don't then they really don't value you as a human being.”

This statement possesses significance far beyond emotional consolation. It reveals one of the deepest contradictions of capitalist modernity: the individual is compelled to continuously prove his sincerity before social structures that fundamentally distrust sincerity itself. The contemporary human being experiences exhaustion not only because of exploitative labour but because of endless emotional self-justification. Modern life demands that individuals continuously explain, defend, market, and authenticate their humanity before institutions and relationships shaped by commodification and competitive self-interest.

Capitalism no longer merely organises the production of goods. It organises consciousness itself. It shapes emotional behaviour, social aspiration, moral standards, self-perception, and even the language through which individuals understand their own worth. Human beings become alienated not only from labour but also from their own emotional existence.

Karl Marx identified alienation as the defining condition of capitalist society. Under capitalism, the worker becomes estranged from the product of labour, from the labour process, from fellow human beings, and ultimately from himself. In contemporary neoliberal capitalism, this alienation expands beyond industrial production into every sphere of existence. Human beings become alienated from their emotions, identities, relationships, and moral instincts. They no longer simply produce commodities; they themselves become commodities circulating within systems of visibility, performance, and validation.

This transformation produces a society where deceit no longer appears as moral failure. Instead, deceit increasingly functions as systemic rationality.

Awareness as Material Consciousness

Within a Marxist framework, awareness does not signify mystical transcendence detached from material conditions. Awareness represents historical and material consciousness — the ability to recognise the social, economic, and political structures shaping human existence. Awareness emerges through contradiction. It develops when individuals begin perceiving the distance between ideological narratives and lived realities.

The statement “Awareness is the shapeless nature of all shapes” acquires dialectical significance when interpreted through historical materialism. Human identities, institutions, moral systems, and social hierarchies are not eternal truths. They are historically produced forms emerging from specific material conditions and class arrangements. Capitalist society presents its structures as natural and inevitable, but awareness exposes them as historically contingent systems serving particular economic interests.

Marx famously writes in The German Ideology:

“The ideas of the ruling class are in every epoch the ruling ideas.”

This insight remains central to understanding contemporary emotional life. Modern capitalism does not merely control economic production; it shapes aspirations, insecurities, desires, emotional expectations, and moral perception. Individuals internalise the logic of competition so deeply that they begin evaluating themselves and others according to market-oriented categories such as productivity, visibility, desirability, profitability, influence, and utility.

Human value therefore becomes measurable.

The aware individual recognises that these standards are not natural expressions of human worth but ideological constructions designed to sustain capitalist relations. Awareness becomes politically dangerous because it exposes the artificiality of social hierarchies that capitalism presents as objective merit.

This is precisely why capitalist society fears consciousness. An aware population begins questioning not only economic exploitation but also emotional manipulation. It begins recognising how insecurity itself is manufactured for economic purposes.

The Commodification of Human Identity

Marx’s theory of commodity fetishism provides one of the most powerful frameworks for understanding contemporary emotional existence. Commodity fetishism refers to the process by which social relations between human beings appear as relations between commodities. Under advanced capitalism, this process extends beyond objects into personality itself.

Human identity becomes marketable capital.

The rise of digital capitalism intensifies this transformation dramatically. Social media platforms convert visibility into social value, compelling individuals to continuously curate themselves according to market principles. Personality becomes branding. Morality becomes performance. Emotional suffering becomes consumable spectacle. Human beings increasingly market intelligence, beauty, political identity, lifestyle, trauma, and even rebellion itself.

The consequences for authentic human relations are devastating.

The individual gradually internalises the belief that recognition must constantly be earned through performance. Existence itself appears insufficient without external validation. The ordinary person therefore experiences chronic insecurity because self-worth becomes dependent upon visibility within competitive social structures.

This condition explains why individuals increasingly over-explain themselves within relationships. They fear invisibility because capitalism equates invisibility with worthlessness. The emotionally exhausted individual desperately seeks recognition not merely because he desires affection, but because social systems have conditioned him to associate recognition with existence itself.

Alder’s statement directly confronts this psychological condition. The moment an individual begins “selling” his humanity to others, he unconsciously accepts the capitalist logic that human worth requires market validation. The tragedy lies not merely in rejection but in the internalisation of commodification itself.

Alienation and Emotional Exhaustion

Marx identified labour alienation as the central feature of capitalist society, yet late capitalism extends alienation far beyond industrial production. Emotional life itself becomes labour.

Modern individuals continuously regulate and perform emotions for survival within institutional structures. Workers perform enthusiasm before exploitative employers. Citizens perform patriotism before states. Consumers perform happiness before society. Individuals perform emotional stability despite psychological collapse.

This condition generates what Marxist psychoanalyst Erich Fromm describes as the pathology of normalcy. Society normalises emotional fragmentation because fragmented individuals remain economically functional. Human beings increasingly suppress authentic feeling in order to maintain employability, social acceptance, and economic survival.

The worker tolerates humiliation because unemployment threatens survival. The employee suppresses anger because dissent risks exclusion. The individual conceals despair because emotional vulnerability appears dangerous within competitive environments.

Over time, authenticity itself becomes psychologically risky.

The modern individual therefore develops fragmented consciousness. One personality emerges within workplaces, another on digital platforms, another within family structures, and another within internal emotional life. Human beings become divided against themselves.

This fragmentation produces deep existential instability because individuals gradually lose connection with authentic emotional experience. Feelings are no longer lived naturally; they are strategically managed according to institutional expectations.

Deceit as Rational Behaviour in Capitalist Society

Modern capitalist society systematically rewards deception. This phenomenon must be understood structurally rather than morally. Deceit is not merely the product of individual immorality; it emerges from economic systems organised around competition, accumulation, and hierarchical power.

Corporations manipulate desire through advertising industries designed to manufacture dissatisfaction. Political institutions construct ideological narratives concealing class interests behind nationalism, religion, and spectacle. Media industries commodify fear, outrage, and emotional polarisation because anxiety generates engagement and profit. Employers disguise exploitation as opportunity while celebrating insecurity as flexibility.

Deceit therefore becomes structurally functional.

Capitalism rewards appearances because appearances sustain accumulation. The system depends upon ideological illusion: the illusion of equality within unequal structures, the illusion of freedom within economic coercion, and the illusion of meritocracy within inherited privilege.

Consequently, individuals adapt psychologically to survive these conditions. Manipulation becomes “networking.” Psychological aggression becomes “confidence.” Exploitative ambition becomes “professionalism.” Strategic dishonesty becomes “smartness.”

Moral categories themselves become reorganised according to economic utility.

This explains why sincerity increasingly appears socially disadvantageous. Honest individuals often experience exclusion because honesty disrupts transactional systems dependent upon calculation and performance. In capitalist society, morality becomes tolerated only when it does not interfere with profitability or hierarchy.

The Collapse of Trust in Late Capitalism

Trust constitutes the invisible infrastructure of civilisation. Without trust, social relations deteriorate into permanent defensive calculation. Yet late capitalism systematically destroys trust because it organises society through competitive individualism rather than collective solidarity.

Individuals increasingly encounter one another not as fellow human beings but as competitors within economic and social hierarchies. Every interaction becomes potentially transactional. Relationships are evaluated through utility, advantage, status, and emotional profitability.

This condition produces widespread emotional insecurity.

People fear betrayal because betrayal has become structurally normalised. Corporations betray workers in pursuit of profit. Governments betray citizens through corruption and ideological manipulation. Markets betray consumers through planned insecurity. Institutions betray morality while publicly performing virtue.

Repeated exposure to systemic deceit reshapes human psychology. Individuals internalise suspicion as survival mechanism. Trust begins appearing irrational within systems organised around competition.

The ordinary human being therefore lives within permanent emotional defensiveness.

This condition affects working-class populations most severely because economic insecurity intensifies emotional vulnerability. The worker cannot freely reject exploitative relationships because survival itself depends upon unstable systems. Emotional degradation thus becomes materially conditioned.

The Invisibilisation of Ordinary Human Life

Capitalism systematically invisibilises the labour sustaining civilisation. The construction worker building cities remains socially invisible. The agricultural labourer feeding populations remains economically insecure. The caregiver sustaining families remains unrecognised. The factory worker producing commodities remains disposable.

Capitalism glorifies accumulation while concealing the labour producing wealth.

This invisibilisation extends into emotional existence itself. Ordinary suffering rarely acquires recognition unless transformed into spectacle. The exhausted labourer commuting daily, the indebted student, the underpaid teacher, the abandoned elderly person, the migrant worker surviving humiliation — all sustain social life while remaining culturally marginal.

This invisibility generates profound psychological consequences.

Human beings require recognition not merely economically but socially. When sacrifice remains unseen, individuals begin doubting their own significance. The ordinary person internalises the belief that his existence possesses no inherent value outside public approval.

Capitalism intensifies this insecurity because recognition itself becomes hierarchical. Wealth automatically generates legitimacy while poverty requires continuous moral justification.

The poor man must prove innocence. The worker must prove loyalty. The vulnerable must prove worthiness. Meanwhile, power assumes credibility automatically.

This asymmetry constitutes one of the deepest violences of capitalist society.

Ideology and the Manufacture of Self-Doubt

Antonio Gramsci’s concept of cultural hegemony explains why oppressed individuals frequently internalise dominant values against their own interests. Capitalist ideology teaches individuals that success results entirely from personal merit while failure reflects personal inadequacy. Structural inequality therefore becomes psychologically individualised.

The unemployed worker blames himself rather than economic systems. The poor internalise shame rather than recognising structural exploitation. Emotionally isolated individuals interpret loneliness as personal failure rather than as consequence of fragmented social relations.

This ideological process produces chronic self-doubt.

Individuals increasingly question their worth because capitalism conditions them to interpret human value through measurable achievement. Digital capitalism intensifies this process by exposing individuals continuously to curated representations of success, beauty, wealth, productivity, and happiness.

The ordinary person therefore experiences perpetual inadequacy while comparing lived reality against manufactured spectacle.

The Society of Spectacle

Guy Debord’s analysis of the “society of spectacle” remains extraordinarily relevant within digital capitalism. In spectacle society, representation replaces lived reality. Human existence becomes mediated through images, performances, and commodified appearances.

People increasingly consume representations of life rather than life itself.

Social media intensifies this transformation dramatically. Individuals no longer simply experience existence; they stage existence for visibility. Every moment becomes potential content. Human beings become both commodity and advertiser simultaneously.

The individual markets happiness, relationships, morality, suffering, intelligence, and identity.

The result is widespread emotional unreality.

Human beings increasingly lose the ability to distinguish authentic feeling from performative expression. Emotional life becomes theatrical because social systems reward visibility more than sincerity.

Psychoanalysis and Capitalist Anxiety

Marxist psychoanalysis reveals that modern anxiety cannot be understood purely as individual pathology. Anxiety emerges from contradictions embedded within capitalist social relations.

The individual is instructed to compete against everyone, trust no one completely, maximise productivity continuously, market himself endlessly, and remain emotionally functional despite structural instability.

These demands generate chronic psychological tension.

The ordinary individual lives under constant pressure to remain economically relevant, socially desirable, emotionally performative, and psychologically adaptable. Failure within any category threatens exclusion.

This explains the increasing prevalence of anxiety, loneliness, depression, and emotional numbness within neoliberal societies. These conditions are not isolated medical abnormalities. They are political symptoms of alienated social systems.

The Moral Inversion of Capitalist Society

Capitalism produces moral inversion by rewarding behaviours that sustain accumulation regardless of ethical consequences. Aggression becomes ambition. Manipulation becomes strategy. Exploitation becomes efficiency. Deceit becomes intelligence.

Meanwhile kindness appears weakness, honesty appears impractical, and collective solidarity appears naïve.

This inversion reshapes consciousness profoundly.

Young individuals entering capitalist society quickly learn that moral integrity frequently obstructs advancement. Survival increasingly demands emotional compromise. The tragedy lies not merely in individual corruption but in systemic adaptation itself.

Human beings gradually reshape themselves according to market rationality.

The Common Man and the Crisis of Dignity

The ordinary human being suffers most intensely under these conditions because he lacks institutional power capable of protecting dignity. The worker cannot freely reject exploitation. The employee cannot easily confront humiliation. The economically dependent individual cannot escape manipulative relationships without risking survival.

Thus dignity itself becomes materially constrained.

Marx insists that economic structures shape consciousness because survival conditions determine behavioural possibilities. The ordinary individual often remains trapped within degrading environments not because of personal weakness but because material insecurity limits autonomy.

Modern self-help ideology individualises suffering while concealing structural causes. It teaches adaptation rather than transformation.

Marxist analysis restores historical perspective by revealing how systemic conditions produce emotional crises.

Awareness as Resistance

Awareness within Marxism represents critical consciousness capable of recognising ideological manipulation and structural inequality. Awareness does not mean passive contemplation; it means understanding how labour is exploited, how identities are commodified, how media manufactures consent, and how emotional insecurity sustains consumerism.

This consciousness possesses transformative significance because it interrupts internalised inferiority.

The individual begins recognising that human worth does not emerge from market visibility, institutional approval, or capitalist productivity. He understands that suffering is socially produced rather than individually deserved.

Such consciousness restores dignity.

Human Relations Beyond Transaction

The crisis of trust within contemporary society emerges fundamentally from commodified social relations. Capitalism converts human interaction into transactional exchange governed by utility.

Friendship becomes networking. Romance becomes status negotiation. Community becomes branding opportunity.

Human beings increasingly fear vulnerability because vulnerability threatens competitive positioning.

This condition produces emotional isolation despite technological hyper-connectivity. The ordinary person experiences profound loneliness because relationships increasingly lack sincerity, permanence, and collective grounding.

Rebuilding trust therefore requires more than moral reform. It requires transforming the material conditions producing competitive alienation.

Toward Collective Human Liberation

Marxism does not merely critique capitalism; it proposes the restoration of human sociality through collective liberation. Human beings are fundamentally social creatures, yet alienation distorts this social essence by subordinating relationships to market logic.

A humane society requires economic dignity, social equality, collective solidarity, democratic control over labour, and liberation from commodified existence.

Without structural transformation, emotional crises will intensify because capitalist systems continuously reproduce insecurity, fragmentation, and competition.

The struggle for authentic human relations is therefore inseparable from the struggle against exploitative economic structures.

Conclusion: Awareness Against Commodification

The contemporary crisis of trust reflects the deeper contradictions of capitalist civilisation. Human beings increasingly inhabit societies where deceit functions as intelligence, visibility determines worth, and authenticity requires continuous proof.

The ordinary individual becomes emotionally exhausted because capitalist society compels him to market not only labour but humanity itself.

Shannon L. Alder’s observation acquires radical significance within this context. The moment a person feels compelled to “sell” his humanity, he unconsciously submits to commodified social logic.

Marxist analysis reveals that this condition is neither accidental nor purely psychological. It emerges from material structures organising society through competition, inequality, alienation, and spectacle.

Awareness therefore becomes an act of resistance — not spiritual withdrawal, but historical consciousness.

It is the recognition that human worth exceeds market value, that labour creates civilisation, that solidarity matters more than performance, and that dignity does not require permission from systems built upon exploitation.

The struggle for truth in modern society is ultimately the struggle to reclaim human beings from commodification itself.

“To be radical is to grasp things by the root. But for man the root is man himself.”
— Karl Marx

 

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Anti-Defection Law and the Constitutional Fraud of “Legislative Mergers”: From Aaya Ram Gaya Ram to the Institutionalization of Political Defection in India

 A Critical Constitutional Examination of the Tenth Schedule, Judicial Ambiguity, Legislative Manipulation, and the Collapse of Democratic Morality in Contemporary India

-Ramphal Kataria

Abstract

The anti-defection law, introduced through the Fifty-Second Constitutional Amendment in 1985, was envisioned as a constitutional safeguard against political corruption, legislative instability, and opportunistic floor-crossing. It emerged from a period marked by rampant defections that destabilized elected governments and reduced representative democracy to a marketplace of power. However, nearly four decades later, the Tenth Schedule has itself become an instrument through which mass defections are legitimized under the constitutional fiction of “merger.” The recent recognition by the Chairman of the Rajya Sabha of the merger of seven Rajya Sabha Members of Parliament of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) once again exposes the deep structural crisis of India’s anti-defection framework.

This essay critically examines the genesis, constitutional philosophy, and contemporary degeneration of the anti-defection law. It analyses how Paragraph 4 of the Tenth Schedule, originally framed as a narrow exception for genuine political mergers, has been transformed into a mechanism for engineering defections through legislative wings without any merger of the original political party. Drawing upon major judicial precedents including Kihoto Hollohan, Subhash Desai, Kuldeep Bishnoi, the Goa defection litigation, and the pending Girish Chodankar matter, the essay argues that the recognition of legislative mergers without organizational merger constitutes a fraud upon the Constitution.

The essay further explores the political role of Speakers and Chairpersons as partisan constitutional authorities, the reluctance of the Supreme Court to decisively intervene in time-sensitive defections, and the collapse of constitutional morality in cases involving the Shiv Sena, Nationalist Congress Party, Goa Congress, Karnataka Congress, and now AAP. It argues that the present anti-defection framework has failed in both principle and practice, and proposes a radically simplified constitutional model: immediate vacation of seat upon defection, followed by a mandatory fresh electoral mandate.

The essay concludes that the present constitutional regime has transformed anti-defection law from an instrument against political immorality into a shield for organized constitutional subversion by ruling parties.

I. Introduction: Democracy, Defection and Constitutional Betrayal

The Indian constitutional system rests upon the foundational principle of representative democracy. The legitimacy of governments is not merely derived from numerical majorities secured within legislative chambers, but from the democratic mandate conferred by citizens upon political parties and their candidates during elections. In a parliamentary democracy, voters do not merely elect individuals; they elect ideological programmes, collective political visions, and organizational structures represented through political parties. Consequently, when elected representatives abandon the political party on whose symbol and programme they were elected, the issue transcends individual political choice and enters the domain of constitutional morality and democratic betrayal.

The anti-defection law was enacted precisely to preserve this democratic sanctity. Yet contemporary India presents a profound constitutional irony. The very constitutional mechanism intended to prevent political defections has increasingly become the route through which large-scale defections are legitimated. The political developments of recent years—from Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh to Goa and Maharashtra, culminating now in the Rajya Sabha split within the Aam Aadmi Party—demonstrate that the Tenth Schedule is no longer functioning as a shield against constitutional subversion. Instead, it is increasingly operating as a constitutional instrument through which electoral mandates are destabilized and opposition formations weakened through engineered legislative realignments.

The recent recognition by the Chairman of the Rajya Sabha of the merger of seven Rajya Sabha MPs belonging to the Aam Aadmi Party into the Bharatiya Janata Party has reignited one of the most critical constitutional controversies concerning the interpretation of Paragraph 4 of the Tenth Schedule. The central issue is whether two-thirds members of a legislature party can independently merge into another political party even when the original political party itself continues to exist organizationally, electorally, ideologically, and legally. The answer to this question goes to the heart of constitutional democracy in India because it concerns the relationship between political parties, electoral mandates, and representative legitimacy itself.

II. Genesis of the Anti-Defection Law: The Era of “Aaya Ram Gaya Ram”

The anti-defection law did not emerge in a constitutional vacuum. It was a response to one of the most unstable and morally corrosive phases in Indian parliamentary democracy during the 1960s and 1970s, when defections became routine instruments for acquiring political office, ministerial positions, and governmental power. The phenomenon was so widespread that it fundamentally threatened the stability of elected governments across India.

The phrase “Aaya Ram Gaya Ram” entered Indian political discourse in 1967 after Haryana legislator Gaya Lal changed political parties multiple times within a single day. That phrase soon became symbolic of a deeper political degeneration where ideology ceased to matter and legislators increasingly became instruments of bargaining and transactional politics. Between 1967 and 1971, thousands of defections occurred across state legislatures. Governments were toppled overnight, coalition arrangements collapsed repeatedly, and chief ministerial offices became products of shifting loyalties rather than democratic continuity.

One of the most striking examples of organized mass defection occurred under Bhajan Lal in 1979–80. Bhajan Lal, who had assumed office with Janata Party support, shifted allegiance to the Congress along with a substantial bloc of MLAs after political circumstances altered at the national level. This was not an isolated individual defection but an orchestrated transfer of legislative strength from one political formation to another. Haryana effectively became the laboratory for large-scale engineered defections in India.

Similar patterns emerged across multiple states. Uttar Pradesh witnessed recurring collapses of governments through defections during the late 1960s. Bihar became synonymous with unstable coalition politics. Andhra Pradesh saw legislative fragmentation and realignment. Goa and several Northeastern states became theaters of chronic political instability where governments frequently changed not through elections but through post-electoral defections.

The constitutional concern was not limited merely to governmental instability. The deeper anxiety was that representative democracy itself was being reduced to a marketplace in which elected legislators became commodities capable of altering public mandates after elections. Parliament increasingly recognized that if elected representatives could casually overturn electoral verdicts through defections, the legitimacy of democratic governance itself would be fundamentally weakened.

III. The Fifty-Second Constitutional Amendment and the Tenth Schedule

In response to this prolonged crisis, Parliament enacted the Fifty-Second Constitutional Amendment Act, 1985 under the government of Rajiv Gandhi, inserting the Tenth Schedule into the Constitution. The anti-defection law sought to create a constitutional framework capable of preserving political stability, ensuring party discipline, protecting electoral mandates, and curbing corruption in legislative politics.

The Tenth Schedule provided that legislators could be disqualified if they voluntarily gave up membership of their political party or voted contrary to party directives. The law reflected the belief that legislators elected on a party platform owe constitutional fidelity to the political organization through which they secured electoral legitimacy.

At its inception, however, the Tenth Schedule contained two significant exceptions to disqualification: “split” and “merger.” A split involving one-third of legislators was protected from disqualification, while a merger involving two-thirds members of a legislature party was similarly exempted.

The split provision was rapidly abused. Legislators routinely manufactured artificial factions to evade disqualification proceedings. Political opportunism flourished under constitutional protection. Recognizing this abuse, Parliament enacted the Ninety-First Constitutional Amendment Act, 2003, deleting the split provision entirely. The intention was unmistakable: organised defections disguised as splits would no longer receive constitutional immunity.

After 2003, merger under Paragraph 4 remained the sole surviving exception to disqualification.

IV. Understanding Paragraph 4 of the Tenth Schedule: Constitutional Text and Constitutional Purpose

Paragraph 4 of the Tenth Schedule provides protection from disqualification where the “original political party” merges with another political party. Paragraph 4(2) states that such merger shall be deemed to have occurred if not less than two-thirds members of the legislature party concerned agree to such merger.

The constitutional controversy lies in the interpretation of this deeming provision. One interpretation, increasingly advanced in recent political disputes, suggests that two-thirds legislators themselves can effectuate a merger irrespective of whether the original political party merges organizationally. Another interpretation, grounded in constitutional structure and democratic logic, holds that the merger of the original political party is the foundational requirement, while the concurrence of two-thirds legislators merely validates legislative recognition of that organizational merger.

The latter interpretation appears far more consistent with the constitutional scheme. The phrase “original political party” cannot be rendered meaningless. The Constitution deliberately distinguishes between a political party and its legislature party. The legislature wing is only one component of a much larger political organization consisting of office bearers, organizational units, party constitution, membership structures, ideological commitments, election symbols, and party cadre. To permit legislators alone to extinguish or merge party identity would effectively subordinate the political party to its temporary legislative contingent.

Such an interpretation would fundamentally distort parliamentary democracy itself.

V. Legislature Party and Political Party: A Constitutional Distinction

One of the gravest constitutional distortions in recent anti-defection jurisprudence has been the gradual conflation of “legislature party” with “political party.” This confusion has enabled legislators to claim authority over political organizations that exist independently of legislative chambers.

A legislature party is merely the elected wing functioning inside the House. The political party, however, exists beyond legislative representation. It comprises organizational structures, national and state executives, office bearers, ideological programmes, registered constitutions, membership networks, election machinery, and public political identity. Legislators are representatives of the political party within legislatures; they are not the political party itself.

This distinction is reinforced not merely by constitutional theory but also by the Election Symbols (Reservation and Allotment) Order, 1968. Paragraph 16 of the Symbols Order deals with mergers of political parties and recognizes only organizational mergers. The Supreme Court in cases such as Samyukta Socialist Party and All Party Hill Leaders’ Conference held that a merger requires approval at the level of the political organization itself, not merely its elected legislators.

Therefore, if the original political party continues to exist independently, organizationally intact and electorally functional, there can be no genuine constitutional merger. What exists instead is merely a legislative split—a category consciously removed from constitutional protection by the Ninety-First Amendment.

VI. Judicial Evolution: From Kihoto Hollohan to Subhash Desai

The constitutional interpretation of the anti-defection law has evolved through several landmark judgments. In Kihoto Hollohan v. Zachillhu, the Supreme Court upheld the constitutional validity of the Tenth Schedule while recognizing that the Speaker acts as a tribunal subject to judicial review. This judgment attempted to balance legislative autonomy with constitutional accountability.

However, subsequent political developments exposed the structural limitations of this framework. Speakers and Chairpersons, despite acting as tribunals, continued to function as partisan political actors closely aligned with ruling parties.

The constitutional crisis deepened dramatically during the Maharashtra Shiv Sena split. In Subhash Desai v. Principal Secretary, the Supreme Court recognized the distinction between the political party and the legislature party. The Court explicitly held that the Tenth Schedule does not accord primacy to the legislature wing over the political party. This observation was constitutionally significant because it directly undermined the argument that legislators alone can effectuate mergers or determine party identity.

Similarly, the Punjab and Haryana High Court in the Kuldeep Bishnoi defection case held that no automatic presumption of merger arises merely because legislators claim such merger. The Court emphasized that constitutional authorities must examine whether the original political party itself has taken steps toward merger.

Yet the Bombay High Court’s judgment in Girish Chodankar adopted a contrasting interpretation by accepting that two-thirds legislators could independently effectuate a merger. This judgment has attracted extensive criticism for ignoring both the constitutional distinction between political party and legislature party and the framework of the Symbols Order. Significantly, the matter remains pending before the Supreme Court, rendering reliance upon it constitutionally unsettled.

VII. The AAP Rajya Sabha Merger and the Question of Constitutional Fraud

The recent recognition of the merger of seven AAP Rajya Sabha MPs with the BJP represents perhaps the sharpest contemporary illustration of the constitutional crisis surrounding Paragraph 4. The Aam Aadmi Party continues to exist as an organizational, electoral, ideological, and legal entity. Its constitution remains intact. Its national executive has not approved any merger. Its election symbol remains unchanged. Its state units continue functioning independently. Its organizational structure remains operational.

In such circumstances, there is plainly no merger of the original political party.

What has occurred is merely a split within the legislature wing. Yet splits were deliberately excluded from constitutional protection through the Ninety-First Amendment Act. Therefore, presenting such a split as a merger effectively resurrects the deleted split doctrine through constitutional manipulation.

The Chairman of the Rajya Sabha, acting as a tribunal under the Tenth Schedule, was constitutionally required to examine whether the original political party itself had merged. Instead, reliance upon the unsettled Girish Chodankar interpretation while disregarding the principles articulated in Subhash Desai and Kuldeep Bishnoi raises serious constitutional concerns.

The issue is not merely technical. It concerns whether constitutional provisions are being interpreted in a manner that defeats their underlying democratic purpose. When constitutional mechanisms designed to prevent defections are used to legitimize defections, the question inevitably arises whether the process constitutes a fraud upon the Constitution itself.

VIII. Constitutional Authorities, Judicial Delay and the Crisis of Constitutional Morality

The anti-defection framework also reveals a structural institutional crisis. Speakers, Chairpersons, and Presiding Officers act as tribunals under the Tenth Schedule, yet they remain active political figures associated with ruling parties. This creates an inherent conflict between constitutional neutrality and partisan loyalty.

The problem is aggravated by judicial delay. In several major defection controversies, including Maharashtra, constitutional adjudication arrived long after political consequences had become irreversible. Governments were formed, ministries constituted, legislative control transferred, and terms substantially completed before judicial scrutiny concluded.

The practical constitutional message increasingly appears to be: defect first, litigate later.

This delay transforms constitutional review into retrospective academic commentary rather than effective constitutional enforcement. The Supreme Court’s inability to ensure timely adjudication has inadvertently incentivised political actors to exploit procedural delays for irreversible political gains.

Several constitutional scholars and legal luminaries have warned against this institutional decay. Fali S. Nariman argued that the anti-defection law has gradually weakened parliamentary democracy by reducing legislators to instruments of party command rather than constitutional representatives. H.M. Seervai criticised the law for undermining deliberative democracy and extinguishing independent legislative judgment. Rajeev Dhavan has repeatedly warned that the law, as currently interpreted, rewards collective defections while punishing isolated dissenters.

The present constitutional situation therefore reflects not merely legal ambiguity but the erosion of constitutional morality itself.

IX. Conclusion: Democracy at the Edge of Constitutional Subversion

The anti-defection law was enacted with the promise of rescuing Indian democracy from instability, corruption, and opportunistic defections. Instead, it has gradually evolved into a constitutional mechanism through which organized defections are regularized under legal fiction. The recent AAP Rajya Sabha merger controversy demonstrates how constitutional language can be manipulated to overturn electoral mandates while preserving formal legality.

The Constitution never intended legislature parties to become sovereign entities capable of dissolving or merging political parties through numerical arithmetic inside legislative chambers. The Tenth Schedule sought to preserve democratic mandates, not facilitate their circumvention.

The merger of legislators without merger of the original political party is not merely a technical constitutional irregularity. It strikes at the very foundation of representative democracy. When constitutional authorities validate such actions under the guise of legality, the issue transcends ordinary politics and enters the realm of constitutional fraud.

If democratic accountability is to survive meaningfully in India, the anti-defection law requires radical restructuring. A legislator who voluntarily abandons the political party on whose symbol he or she was elected should automatically vacate the seat and seek a fresh electoral mandate. Such a framework alone would restore constitutional clarity, democratic legitimacy, and fidelity to electoral morality.

The contemporary crisis of anti-defection law is therefore not merely a legal dispute over Paragraph 4 of the Tenth Schedule. It is a constitutional struggle over whether electoral mandates, party democracy, and representative legitimacy shall continue to possess substantive meaning in India’s parliamentary system—or whether constitutional forms shall merely become instruments for legitimizing political subversion under the shadow of legality.

References

1. Austin, Granville. Working a Democratic Constitution: The Indian Experience. New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1999.

2. Seervai, H.M. Constitutional Law of India, Vol. 3. Universal Law Publishing, 4th Edition.

3. Nariman, Fali S. Before Memory Fades: An Autobiography. Hay House India, 2010.

4. Kashyap, Subhash C. Parliamentary Procedure, Law and Practice in India. Universal Law Publishing.

5. Noorani, A.G. Constitutional Questions in India: The President, Parliament and the States. Oxford University Press.

6. Jain, M.P. Indian Constitutional Law. LexisNexis Butterworths.

7. Basu, D.D. Introduction to the Constitution of India. LexisNexis.

8. The Constitution of India, Tenth Schedule.

9. The Constitution (Fifty-Second Amendment) Act, 1985.

10. The Constitution (Ninety-First Amendment) Act, 2003.

11. Election Symbols (Reservation and Allotment) Order, 1968.

12. Kihoto Hollohan v. Zachillhu, 1992 Supp (2) SCC 651.

13. Subhash Desai v. Principal Secretary, 2023 SCC OnLine SC 607.

14. Kuldeep Bishnoi defection case, Punjab & Haryana High Court.

15. Girish Chodankar v. Speaker, Goa Legislative Assembly, Bombay High Court.

16. Samyukta Socialist Party case.

17. All Party Hill Leaders’ Conference case.

18. Shivraj Singh Chouhan v. Speaker, Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly.

19. Reports of the Committee on Defections (Y.B. Chavan Committee), Lok Sabha Secretariat.

20. PRS Legislative Research Reports on Anti-Defection Law and Parliamentary Accountability.