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Maratha Quota

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July 27, 2020

Why in news?

The Supreme Court (SC) will hear petitions challenging the Maratha quota.

What are the petitions about?

  • The petitions challenge the reservation granted to the Maratha community in education and jobs in Maharashtra.
  • They challenge the June 2019 Bombay High Court (HC) decision that upheld the constitutional validity of the Maratha quota.
  • [This reservation was given under the Socially and Educationally Backward Classes (SEBC) Act, 2018.]
  • The SC will also hear a petition challenging admission to postgraduate medical and dental courses under the quota in the state.

Who are the Marathas?

  • The Marathas are a group of castes comprising peasants, landowners among others.
  • Not all Marathi-speaking persons belong to Maratha community.
  • A politically dominant community in Maharashtra, it comprises nearly one-third of the population of the state.
  • Historically, Marathas have been identified as a ‘warrior’ caste with large land-holdings.

What did the Bombay HC rule?

  • In 2019, a division bench commenced hearing in petitions filed by advocate Jishri Laxmanrao Patil and others.
  • The Bombay HC held that the limit of reservation should not exceed 50%.
  • It ruled that the 16% quota granted by the state was not ‘justifiable’.
  • It reduced the quota to 12% in education and 13% in government jobs.
  • For this, the court relied on findings of the 11-member Maharashtra State Backward Class Commission (MSBCC).
  • It also said that in exceptional circumstances and extraordinary situations, this 50% limit can be crossed.
  • This limit should be subject to availability of contemporaneous data reflecting backwardness, inadequacy of representation and without affecting the efficiency in administration.
  • The Court had said that while the backwardness of the community was not comparable with SCs and STs.
  • It was comparable with several other backward classes (OBCs), which find place in the list of OBCs pursuant to the Mandal Commission.

What is MSBCC?

  • The MSBCC surveyed about 45,000 families from two villages from each of 355 talukas with more than 50% Maratha population.
  • It reported that the Maratha community is socially, economically and educationally backward.
  • The HC observed that the Commission had conclusively established the backwardness of the community.
  • It had also established inadequacy of representation of the Maratha community in public employment in the state.

What is the existing reservation in Maharashtra post HC verdict?

  • In Mandal Commission case 1993, the SC had ruled that total reservation for backward classes cannot go beyond the 50%-mark.
  • Maharashtra is one of the few states that are an exception to this.
  • Following the 2001 State Reservation Act, the total reservation in the state was 52%.
  • Along with the 12-13% Maratha quota, the total reservation is 64-65%.
  • The 10 % Economically Weaker Sections (EWS) quota announced by the Centre is also effective in the state.

How challenges to Maratha quota have been dealt by the courts?

  • The Bombay HC dismissed a petition filed by a group of aspiring medical students.
  • This petition challenged the constitutional validity of amendment to the SEBC Act that allows Maratha reservation for 2019-20 admissions to MBBS courses.
  • In 2019, the SC refused to stay the Bombay HC judgement, which had upheld the validity of the reservation.
  • It had clarified that the reservation will not have retrospective effect.
  • Thereafter, the SC has refused to put an interim stay on the quota.

 

Source: The Indian Express

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