For Tamil Nadu loss of 2 Lok Sabha seats in '60s, HC moots 5,600cr in damages

For Tamil Nadu loss of 2 Lok Sabha seats in '60s, HC moots 5,600cr in damages

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CHENNAI: If Tamil Nadu has unfairly paid the price for controlling population growth by having its Lok Sabha seats reduced by two, is there a way to compensate for that? The Madras High Court has come out with a formula that pegs monetary compensation to the state at Rs 5,600 crore.
Till 1962, Tamil Nadu had 41 Lok Sabha members. The number got reduced to 39 ahead of the 1967 general polls because the state had successfully controlled its population growth by then.
Juxtaposing this supposed anomaly with the dramatic no-confidence motion in 1999 that resulted in the toppling of the Atal Bihari Vajpayee government by one vote, the division bench said Tamil Nadu should be compensated either monetarily or through additional representation in Rajya Sabha. "When one MP vote itself was capable of toppling a government, it is very shocking that Tamil Nadu lost two MPs because of successful implementation of birth control in the state," the bench of Justice N Kirubakaran and Justice B Pugalendhi said.
"Notionally, the contribution of an MP in five years could be taken as Rs 200 crore, though it cannot be determined monetarily. Therefore, for every election since 1967, Tamil Nadu has to be compensated Rs 400 crore for reduction of two MP seats, which amounts to Rs 5600 crore," the bench said.
Asking the Union government why TN's Lok Sabha representation couldn't be restored to 41 from the next general elections, the bench also suo motu impleaded 10 top political parties, including DMK and main opposition AIA-DMK, besides Congress and BJP, to offer their responses.
The court was hearing a PIL seeking de-reservation of Tenkasi parliamentary constituency, which has rema-ined a reserved constituency for more than half a century now.
"Those states which failed to implement the birth-control programmes benefited with more political representatives in the Parliament while, states, especially Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh, which successfully implemented birth-control programmes, stood to lose two seats in Parliament," it said.
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