[What also needs be highlighted is that the scheme was steered through the
parliament by the Finance Minister fraudulently piggybacking on the budget
proposal 2017, further aided by last-monent amendments to the corresponding
Finance Bill, thereby denying the upper house any effective say in the
matter and, for that matter, any meaningful debates on the floor of the
parliament over the specific provisions.

(Ref.: <
https://www.livemint.com/Politics/TxNZepp9NdWN80vi94hsEM/Finance-bill-lays-down-the-roadmap-for-issuing-electoral-bon.html?utm_source=scroll&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=scroll>,
<
https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/govt-proposed-40-changes-in-finance-bill-for-poll-reforms/story-ntDxai6jN4yU4gR7zch2DP.html>,
<
https://www.dailyo.in/politics/finance-bill-2017-lok-sabha-media-tax-aadhar-arun-jaitley/story/1/16345.html>,
<http://pib.nic.in/newsite/PrintRelease.aspx?relid=178142> and <
https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/opinion/electoral-bonds-secretive-and-opaque/article23323002.ece
>.)

Opened the doors to uncapped anonymous donations to political parties
eschewing disclosures by the players involved.
All in the name of removing corruption!]

https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/an-invitation-to-corruption/article25692841.ece?fbclid=IwAR11B1IcF4s4mtTLp0YrxFSpy-YI5yVZFYw9_2wLkaLOclJFH661dS-W5cU

An invitation to corruption?
Suhrith Parthasarathy

DECEMBER 08, 2018 00:02 IST
UPDATED: DECEMBER 07, 2018 23:00 IST

*The Electoral Bond Scheme inhibits the citizen’s capacity to meaningfully
participate in political and public life*

Early this year the government introduced an Electoral Bond Scheme
purportedly with a view to cleansing the prevailing culture of political
sponsorship. But the programme’s failings have been so blindingly obvious,
and its consequences so utterly devastating to rectitude and transparency
in government, that even O.P. Rawat, who just retired Chief Election
Commissioner, thought it fit to deliver a damning indictment of the scheme.
“There are many grey areas in this because when there is no ceiling on
party expenditure and the EC (Election Commission) cannot monitor it, how
can you be sure that what is coming in is not black money as there is a
secrecy of the donor,” Mr. Rawat told The Economic Times in an interview
last week. “Even foreign money can come and even a dying company can give
money now... So, prima facie it appears the scheme cannot really deliver
whatever it was intended to.”

Too opaque
In its present form, the scheme permits not only individuals and body
corporates, but also “every artificial juridical person,” to purchase
bonds, issued by the State Bank of India, in denominations of ₹1,000,
₹10,000, ₹lakh, ₹10 lakh and ₹1 crore, during specified periods of the
year. Issued in the form of promissory notes, once a bond is purchased the
buyer can donate it to any political party, which can then encash it on
demand.

The government claims that since these bonds are purchased through banking
channels the scheme will eliminate the infusion of black money into
electoral funding. But not only is this argument palpably false, as a
simple reading of the scheme’s terms shows us, the programme also virtually
endorses corruption in political funding, as Milan Vaishnav has argued.
Consider, for example, the fact that the scheme allows for complete
anonymity of the donor. Neither the purchaser of the bond nor the political
party receiving the donation is mandated to disclose the donor’s identity.
Therefore, not only will, say, the shareholders of a corporation be unaware
of the company’s contributions, but the voters too will have no idea of
how, and through whom, a political party has been funded.

Just as damaging to the most basic democratic ideals is the elimination of
a slew of other barriers that were in place to check the excesses of
corporate political sponsoring. For instance, the programme removes an
existing condition that had prohibited companies from donating anything
more than 7.5% of their average net-profit over the previous three years.
This now means that even loss-making entities can make unlimited
contributions. Additionally, the requirement that a corporation ought to
have been in existence for at least three years before it could make
donations — a system that was meant to stop shell concerns from being
created with a view purely to syphoning money into politics — has also been
removed.

Two judgments
The dangers inherent in untrammelled funding of political parties,
especially by corporations, have been apparent for many years. Even as
early as in 1957, in a pair of judgments outstanding in their lucidity and
prescience, the Bombay and the Calcutta High Courts warned Parliament of
the perils in allowing companies to freely add to party coffers. It’s a
threat, wrote Chief Justice M.C. Chagla, of the Bombay High Court, which is
likely to “grow apace and which may ultimately overwhelm and even throttle
democracy in the country”. The court was conscious that, given the
circumscriptions of the law, it could scarcely deny, in the case before it,
permission sought by Tata Iron and Steel Co. Ltd. to amend its memorandum
of association, to allow the company to make contributions to different
political interests. But this did not stop the court from drawing
Parliament’s attention to the problem.

Even H.M. Seervai, who was representing Tata, the court noted, conceded
that the least the company could do was to disclose clearly in its yearly
balance sheet the list of donations made by it. But, to Chief Justice
Chagla, such a condition was grossly insufficient. It was imperative, he
ruled, that not only the company’s shareholders, but electors too must know
how a party is being financed. For democracy, he believed, couldn’t
function unless the voters had free and complete access to information
about the parties for which they were going to vote.

Only months earlier, faced with a similar petition, the Calcutta High Court
had made an almost identical appeal. “To the cynic it appears to be a plea
of the company to have a legal sanction to bribe the Government of the day,
to induce policies that will help the company in its business,” wrote
Justice P.B. Mukharji. If amendments of this kind were allowed, and if
joint stock companies serve as adjuncts to political parties, he added, the
“man who pays the piper will then call the tune”.

In entreating Parliament to act, the judgments were recognising a bedrock
principle of democracy: that public action ought to be guided by
transparency and fairness. Unfortunately, however, in the years since,
every effort has been made to endorse opacity in political funding. The
electoral bonds scheme, which represents the latest such assault, unless
immediately rescinded, may well irredeemably damage India’s democratic
edifice.

As petitions filed in the Supreme Court point out, the scheme suffers from
at least two foundational defects. One, that it was incorporated on the
back of a series of amendments made to legislation, including the
Representation of the People Act, the Income Tax Act and the Companies Act,
which were introduced in the form of a money bill. And two, that the scheme
flouts a number of fundamental rights.

Article 110 of the Constitution allows the Speaker to classify a proposed
legislation as a money bill, only when the draft law deals with all or any
of the subjects enlisted in the provision. These subjects comprise a set of
seven features, including items such as the imposition of a tax, the
regulation of the borrowing of money by the government, the custody of the
Consolidated Fund of India, the appropriation of money out of the
consolidated fund, and any matter incidental to the subjects explicitly
mentioned in Article 110. Hard as we might try, though, it’s impossible to
see how the provisions pertaining to the electoral bond scheme could
possibly fall within any of these categories. The Finance Act, through
which these amendments were introduced, therefore did not deal with only
those matters contained in Article 110.

Fundamental rights
The scheme is equally destructive in its subversion of the fundamental
rights to equality and freedom of expression. There’s no doubt that the
Constitution does not contain an explicitly enforceable right to vote. But
implicit in its guarantees of equality and free speech is a right to
knowledge and information. Our courts have nearly consistently seen
“freedom of voting” as distinct from the right to vote, as a facet of the
right to freedom of expression and as an essential condition of political
equality. In the absence of complete knowledge about the identities of
those funding the various different parties, it’s difficult to conceive how
a citizen can meaningfully participate in political and public life. As
Ornit Shani’s wonderful book, How India Became Democratic, shows us, the
institutionalising of equality through the principle of one person one
vote, and through the creation of the universal adult franchise, was
critical to building India’s republican structure. When the power of that
vote is diluted through opacity in political funding, democracy as a whole
loses its intrinsic value.

Ultimately, therefore, to borrow from English jurist Stephen Sedley’s
formulation, the electoral bonds scheme suggests two possibilities: one,
that the government doesn’t understand the Constitution; or, two, it does,
and has expressly set out to transgress it.

Suhrith Parthasarathy is an advocate practising at the Madras High Court

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