A petition filed in the Supreme Court argues that Tamil Nadu's Governor is legally obligated to invite the Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK), led by actor-turned-politician Vijay, to form a government in the state. Advocate A. Lakshminarayanan filed the plea, contending that failing to do so would undermine democratic norms and go against the will of voters.
What the Petition Claims
The petition frames the Governor's invitation as a constitutional duty, not a discretionary act. It argues that bypassing TVK, which the petitioner appears to believe holds a claim to government formation, would, in the petitioner's words, "sound the death-knell for democracy." The plea treats the electoral mandate as a directive that the Governor is bound to honour.
The petition does not provide specific details about the current composition of the Tamil Nadu assembly or the exact grounds on which TVK's claim to government formation rests, based on the available information. The source does not clarify whether TVK currently holds a majority or is part of a coalition arrangement, which are the usual constitutional triggers for a Governor's invitation.
Why This Matters
Disputes over a Governor's role in government formation have a long and contested history in Indian constitutional law. Governors hold formal authority to invite a party or coalition to form a government, but courts have repeatedly held that this power is not unlimited and must reflect the actual arithmetic of the legislature. A Supreme Court hearing could revisit or reinforce those boundaries.
Tamil Nadu has seen prolonged friction between its elected government and the Governor's office in recent years, making any judicial intervention on the scope of gubernatorial discretion politically significant for the state.
For TVK, a relatively new political outfit, a Supreme Court hearing itself raises its profile and forces a formal legal conversation about its electoral standing. The outcome could affect how Governors across states handle similar situations in the future.
The Supreme Court has not yet indicated whether it will admit the petition or issue notice to the government. Admission and the court's initial response will be the first concrete signal of how seriously the bench views the constitutional arguments being made.