Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah (File Photo)
The Muslim Reservation Bill has been launched in the controversial government contracts of the Siddaramaiah government in Karnataka. After the passage of the legislature, when the bill was reached by Governor Dhawar Chand Kehlot, he did not agree with President Darabadi Murmu to approve the bill.
The Governor received the approval of the president
Sources said that Kehlot had reserved the president’s approval bill and sent it to Karnataka’s legal and parliamentary affairs. He said the state government would now send the bill to the president’s approval. In a letter sent to the state government of Kehlot, “The Constitution of India does not allow the reservation based on religion, because it violates the principles of equality (Article 14), Article 15 (Article 15) and Equal Opportunity in Public Employment (Section 16).
Why was it sent to the President
In the letter, the Governor underscore the letter that Article 15 of the Constitution of India prohibits discrimination based on religion, origin, caste, gender or birth. He wrote, “It is clear from Article 200 and 201 that the bill passed by the State Legislature will become a law only if the governor is allocated to the president’s opinions. The President approves it.
What did the governor say
Gehlot said that there was no compulsion to protect the governor for the approval of the president, and that there was no provision in the Constitution that the bill would not be practiced as an action as an action. He said that the governor’s conscience is to use his conscience and decide whether he should recognize the bill or to avoid any complexity in the future, which must be preserved to the president’s view. Kehlot said, “In view of the above issues, I am using the powers under Article 200 and 201 of the Indian Constitution. Public purchase in Karnataka’s 2025 transparency (amendment) bill to accept the president’s view and acceptance of the bill.”
BJP opposes this bill
The two houses of the Karnataka Legislative Assembly passed the bill in March amid the opposition of the Opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
The BJP alleges that the bill is illegal, as the Indian Constitution does not reserve religion based on religion. The party alleges that the bill is the smell of the ruling Congress’s satisfaction politics. The BJP is raising the issue of the bill during the ‘John Acrosh Yatra’ released in Karnataka.
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