ELECTION LAWS OF INDIA

Authors

  • Manoj Singh Guest Faculty, Department Of Law, Justice & Governance, Gautam Buddha University, Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh Author

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Abstract

The term election has been explained by justice Fajal Ali In the case N.P. Ponnuswami vs. Returning Officer, .In his wordsIt seems to me that the word "election" has been used in Part XV of the Constitution in the wide sense, that is to say, to connote the entire procedure to be gone through to return a candidate to the legislature. The use of the expression "conduct of elections" in article 324 specifically points to the wide meaning, and that meaning can also be read consistently into the other provisions which occur in Part XV including article 329 (b). That the word "election" bears this wide meaning whenever we talk of elections in a democratic country, is borne out by the fact that in most of the books on the subject and in several cases dealing with the matter, one of the questions mooted is, when the election begins. The subject is dealt with quite concisely in Halsbury's Laws of England in the following passage(s) under the heading" Commencement of the Election ":--

"Although the first formal step in every election is the issue of the writ, the election is considered for some purposes to begin at an earlier date. It is a question of fact in each case when an election begins in such a way as to make the parties concerned responsible for breaches of election law, the test being whether the contest is "reason- ably imminent". Neither the issue of the writ nor the publication of the notice of election can be looked to as fixing the date when an election begins from this point of view. Nor, again, does the nomination day afford any criterion. The election will usually begin at least earlier than the issue of the writ. The question when the election begins must distinguished from that as to when "the conduct and management of" an election may be said to begin. Again, the question as to when a particular person commences to be a candidate is a question to be considered in each case."

Published

03-08-2018

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How to Cite

Manoj Singh. “ELECTION LAWS OF INDIA”. Journal of Legal Studies & Research, vol. 4, no. 4, Aug. 2018, pp. 450-4, https://journal.thelawbrigade.com/jlsr/article/view/2200.