Why in news?
Political parties are divided on the issue of holding simultaneous elections during consultations with the Law Commission.
What are the advantages?
- Frequent elections impose a burden on human resources.
- They also impede the development process due to the promulgation of Model Code of Conduct.
- The idea of ‘one nation, one election’ will drastically cut the election expenditure.
- The government will be able to focus on legislation and governance.
- Now, they are deviated in the campaign mode periodically.
What are the concerns and challenges?
- Tenure - Synchronisation would involve curtailment or extension of the tenure of a House.
- It is proposed that the Assemblies would be bunched into two categories.
- This will be based on whether their terms end close to the 2019 or the 2024 Lok Sabha elections.
- Elections could be held for one group in 2019 and another in 2024, helping subsequent synchronisations.
- The legal validity of this process is however questionable.
- Constitutional - The move requires amendment to the Representation of Peoples’s Act 1951.
- But attempting to draft a constitutional amendment would highlight the hollowness of the whole idea.
- Discussions with the public, political parties and all other stakeholders would have to be reflected in the bill.
- Significantly, it requires changes to the Constitution’s basic structure, posing a challenge.
- Difficulties - The Election Commission sometimes holds elections to even one state in many phases.
- Given this, holding simultaneous elections for the whole country has many practical difficulties.
- Dissolution - It is possible for Lok Sabha to be prematurely dissolved on account of a vote of no-confidence.
- It is still uncertain if all Assemblies would also be dissolved in that case.
- And in case of a mid-term election, the term of such a House would only be for the remainder of its tenure.
- Defection - Allowing a one-time waiver of the anti-defection law in the event of a hung House is another proposal.
- This is to enable the House to elect a leader.
- However, these reforms can be adopted even without simultaneous elections.
Source: The Hindu, Indian Express