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Petition - Remove Criminals and Cash from Indian Elections

Please see my online petition: http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/remove-criminals-and-cash-from-indian-elections

Recommendations (from ADR) on Electoral and Political Reforms

1. For upholding the highest traditions of probity and morality in public life, any person against whom charges have been framed by a Court of Law of serious offences like murder, attempt to murder, rape, kidnapping, extortion, etc. should not be allowed to contest elections.

2. In order to protect the identity of a voter wishing to exercise his/her right under Section 49(O), an additional button on the EVM should be there saying "None of the Above".

3. Candidates should declare their income and sources of income along with the current declaration of assets and liabilities at the time of nominations.

4. The excessive use of money in elections vitiates democracy. Anyone who breaks the law by giving money and gifts to voters, or exceeding the legal spending limits should have his/her election set aside.

5. The information given in the affidavits on criminal charges, assets etc. should be verified by an independent central authority in a time bound manner. Strong action should be taken against candidates on finding serious anomalies.

6. Clean and accurate voter rolls are the very basis for a functioning democracy. The process to keep them accurate and updated should be made completely citizen friendly. There should be only one voter list for all elections. Access to voter rolls should be made available at all times.

7. As people have the right to elect their representatives, they should also have the right to recall them.

8. The Election Commissioners should be appointed by a committee consisting of the Prime Minister, the Leader of the Opposition, the Speaker of the Lok Sabha and the Deputy Chairperson of the Rajya Sabha.

9. The Election Commissioners should not be eligible for any office after retirement for a period of 5 years. They should also not be allowed to join any political party for a period of 5 years after retirement.

Note 1: Resolutions 1 and 2 above are supported by the Election Commission of India. The EC has written to the Prime Minister with this and several other suggestions a few years ago.

Resolution 2 above emerged as the single most repeated demand across the country.

Recommendations for reform of Political Parties

1. There is an urgent need for a comprehensive Bill to regulate political parties. An excellent draft for this has already been prepared by the Law Commission. Such a Bill needs to be passed by Parliament.

2. There is a need to make it mandatory for all recognized registered political parties to have democratically elected bodies and their functioning, including their financial status, should be made transparent and known to all.

3. Since it has been made mandatory for all candidates to make their financial status public, the political parties should also be called upon to regularly file statements of their assets and liabilities, which should also be made public.

4. Political parties and candidates should declare their sources of funds well before elections so that voters can make an informed choice.

Other Issues

The illegal and unconstitutional allocation of public funds in the name of MP and MLA Local Area Development should be stopped.

Note 2: In our country there are Bills to regulate Companies, Charitable trusts, Societies, Cooperatives, Hospitals, Educational Institutions, Trade Unions, places of worship and other forms of organized activity. However there is no Bill to regulate political parties. Several other countries have such Bills. The two mains issues at this point in time are regulation of political party and election funding and expenses, and ensuring inner party democracy.

Remove Criminals and Cash from Indian Elections

http://www.petitiononline.com/indiaadr/ 

The process of nominating criminals and spending exorbitantly on election campaigns should be stopped immediately.

It is ironic that an ordinary citizen cannot get a Government Class IV job with even a small criminal record, but one can become a Chief Minister or Cabinet Minister, with a murder charge against him. The current Lok Sabha 2004-2009 has 22.1% (120 out of 543) elected MPs with criminal records against them. The number of cases of serious criminal charges against Lok Sabha MPs is 333, with several MPs having multiple cases.

Corruption in society begins with the huge spending in elections. The Chief Election Commissioner wrote publicly that "If a candidate is willing to spend ten times more than the prescribed ceiling, it is not out of philanthropy, but in the secure knowledge that he can earn ten times what he spends once he gets to the seat of power." Therefore, exorbitant expenditure in the elections, including distributing cash, liqour, clothes, and other in-kind inducements to voters to influence their votes should be completely stopped.

Tanveer
Syed Tanveeruddin, सैयद तन्वीरुद्दीन, ಸೈಯದ್ ತನ್ವೀರುದ್ದೀನ್

silkboard's picture

Petition feature on Praja.in itself?

Syed Tanveeruddin, and others, would it help if we build a petition feature on this website itself. But petitions would have to be local in nature, not of national span, meaning, the recepient of the petition would have to be a local public authority.

Syed T, notice that you are from Mysore. Welcome.

As for this petition, yes, I agree, in fact, wont find anyone who doesn't agree, can sign it. But wanted to know how effective online petitions are, or can be.

Naveen's picture

SB - Worth Pursuing

SB - I think the idea of Online petitons is worth pursuing. The reach is enormous & the potential is very high. Some more investigation may be required to check their effectiveness.

Mr.Tanveer - the issues posted above are spot on - there really are no bills that govern the conduct of political parties & must be fought for.

indian's picture

Petitons may not necessarily be of local nature

Sorry for my late reply. Yes please, it'd definitely help.

In my perception / view the petitions may or may not necessarily be of local nature and its recipient may or may not be necessarily a local public authority. Localised petitions usually don't get a good response.

For instance I've seen someone who had created a petition on Mumbai floods. But he hardly got around 55 signatures that too with great difficulty.

Yes, I'm from Mysore. Thank you.

I'll reply regarding the effectiveness of the online petitions as soon as possible.

Tanveer
Syed Tanveeruddin / सैयद तन्वीरुद्दीन / ಸೈಯದ್ ತನ್ವೀರುದ್ದೀನ್

indian's picture

Online petitions are very effective

Online petitions are very effective. God's been really kind with me w.r.t. their success. I'll give the details as soon as possible. Thanks for the feed back Mr. Naveen.

Tanveer
Syed Tanveeruddin / सैयद तन्वीरुद्दीन / ಸೈಯದ್ ತನ್ವೀರುದ್ದೀನ್

silkboard's picture

Local petitions - there is future

Local petitions may not be a popular concept today, but we got to create and promote the concept. A local petition can easily have on-ground contact-based follow up.

the reason online petitions tend to be for national, and local issues are:

  • Local governance structure is weak, and unclear to people
  • There aren't enough people taking, or at least showing interest in local issue. Everyone wants PM directly to solve his/her problem.
  • When seen on per city basis, online population is low.

Let us start the concept of local petitions here. Hope we will see the concept grow. A local petition would be

  • Request for information or transparency (could be an online RTI application itself)
  • Request for action
  • Support for some action which was not highlighted properly by the local media.
  • And protests as well, though these better have contructive angles to them - alternate suggestions, or analysis to justify the protest.

What say?

Naveen's picture

On Line Petitions - I Support

As I have already mentioned, there is a very large, untapped potential with On-Line Petitions. Blogs like ours can easily work things out & make the effort successful, though it might take a while to catch on.

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