From Silence to Showdown: Courts, Governors & Limits of Discretion
When Convention Collapses, Courts Step In
India’s constitutional machinery was designed to run on restraint. Governors were never meant to be regular visitors to courtrooms. Yet, over the past decade—and more sharply in recent years—courts have been forced to step in, not because the Constitution is unclear, but because conventions are being tested to breaking point.
What we are witnessing today is not judicial overreach, but judicial compulsion. When constitutional silence turns strategic, adjudication becomes inevitable.
The Repeating Flashpoint
The Governor’s Address to the legislature has traditionally been the safest ritual in parliamentary democracy. Its very ceremonial nature insulated it from politics. That insulation has worn thin.
In Tamil Nadu, disruption of the Address has ceased to be an exception. It has become repetitive, almost ritualised. When a constitutional act meant to affirm the elected government’s accountability turns into an annual confrontation, the institutional cost is unavoidable.
Courts have not yet been asked to rule directly on walkouts or truncated addresses. But the constitutional principle is clear: where a function is mandated, it is expected to be performed. The Constitution does not recognise a halfway space between delivery and refusal.
Silence may be permissible. Substitution is not.
Bills, Assent, and the Cost of Delay
Judicial intervention has been most direct on the question of assent to legislation. Article 200 allows a Governor to assent, withhold assent, or reserve a Bill for the President. What it does not allow is indefinite inaction.
For decades, this gap was bridged by convention. Governors acted within reasonable timeframes. When delay hardened into practice, litigation followed.
Recent judicial pronouncements—particularly those arising from Tamil Nadu—have sent an unmistakable message: discretion cannot be converted into dormancy. Prolonged inaction can itself amount to constitutional impropriety.
This marks a significant shift. Courts are no longer content to merely restate convention; they are beginning to scrutinise timelines. Discretion, the judiciary has signalled, must operate in service of governance, not in suspension of it.
Vice-Chancellors and Politics of Paralysis
The confrontation widened with Vice-Chancellor appointments in state universities. Disagreements between Governors and elected governments over procedure led to administrative standstill.
Universities functioned without heads. Academic schedules stalled. Students paid the price for constitutional brinkmanship.
Courts intervened not to appoint candidates, but to prevent paralysis. High Courts and the Supreme Court clarified that Governors, acting as Chancellors, could not indefinitely stall appointments when statutory processes had been followed.
The principle was firm: constitutional offices are facilitators, not veto points by default. Authority does not include the power to freeze institutions into inactivity.
Judicial Lines in the Sand
Across these disputes—Addresses, Bills, appointments—the judiciary has drawn a consistent line. Discretion must operate within constitutional purpose. When discretion becomes obstruction, legitimacy erodes.
Courts have been careful not to collapse the Governor’s role into that of a subordinate executive. They have preserved discretion while rejecting its misuse. What they have restored is balance.
This judicial posture reflects institutional fatigue. Courts are not eager arbiters of political conflict. But when unelected authorities repeatedly collide with elected governments, the Constitution leaves only one forum for resolution.
A Pattern, Not an Aberration
Tamil Nadu is not an outlier. Similar disputes have surfaced elsewhere—over assent, appointments, and public confrontation. What distinguishes the present phase is not the existence of conflict, but its frequency and visibility.
Courts are increasingly being asked to do what convention once achieved quietly. That is rarely a healthy sign. Judicialisation is a symptom of constitutional stress, not its cure.
Yet, in the absence of restraint, courts become the last custodians of equilibrium. The black blindfold and weighing scale are called to do duty by default.
The Uncomfortable Truth
Governors often argue they are safeguarding constitutional values. Courts have not questioned intent. They have examined effect. And increasingly, the effect has been paralysis rather than protection.
The law is now moving—cautiously but clearly—toward limiting the space for strategic silence. For now, the judicial signal is unmistakable: discretion is not licence—and such silence, when weaponised, invites judgment. Constitutional authority, the judiciary has indicated, cannot function in permanent opposition to the elected executive.
That is not how parliamentary democracy was designed to function.
This is not about personalities. It is about precedent.
(To be continued)
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