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Freedom of Speech – Defamation, Sedition, etc.

Protecting the Freedom of speech of MPs

Why in the News?

Recent parliamentary sessions witnessed large-scale expunction of remarks made by Opposition leaders, raising concerns over misuse of procedural rules. The issue centres on whether the Speaker (Lok Sabha)/Chairman’s (Rajya Sabha) powers are being used to regulate decorum or to restrict the constitutional freedom of speech of Menmbers of Parliament (MPs) under Article 105.

Which Parliamentary Privileges Specifically Protect Freedom of Speech of MPs?

Article 105 of the Constitution guarantees freedom of speech to Members of Parliament (MPs) within the Houses. This privilege enables fearless debate, executive accountability, and institutional balance. 

  1. Freedom of Speech in the House (Article 105(1)): Ensures members speak without fear while Parliament is in session and business is being transacted. This freedom is essential for effective discharge of legislative duties and is distinct from Article 19(1)(a).
  2. Immunity from Court Proceedings (Article 105(2)): Grants complete protection from civil or criminal liability for anything said or any vote given in Parliament or its committees. The term “anything” carries the widest amplitude and covers every statement made during parliamentary business.
  3. Absolute Judicial Non-Interference: Courts lack jurisdiction to question speech made inside the House, even if statements are malicious, false, or amount to contempt of court. Once speech is made during parliamentary proceedings, it is immune from judicial scrutiny.
  4. Protection Against External Investigation: Any investigation outside Parliament into a member’s speech or vote amounts to serious interference with parliamentary privilege. Threatening legal action for statements made in the House constitutes breach of privilege.
  5. Distinct from Article 19(2) Restrictions: Reasonable restrictions applicable to citizens under Article 19(2) do not circumscribe speech inside Parliament. Parliamentary speech enjoys higher constitutional insulation.
  6. Comprehensive Constitutional Code: Clauses (1) and (2) of Article 105 form a complete code regarding speech and immunity. Matters outside this scope, such as defamatory publication of expunged questions, remain subject to ordinary law.
  7. Extension to Non-Members with Speaking Rights: Immunity under Article 105(2) applies to persons constitutionally entitled to speak in Parliament (e.g., Attorney General), ensuring functional continuity of debate.
  8. Internal Regulation by Rules of Procedure: While constitutionally protected, speech remains subject to House rules and presiding officer’s authority. The Chair may act against defamatory, incriminatory, or indecorous statements.
  9. Committee of Privileges Oversight: Emphasises that privilege is not an unrestricted licence. Misuse may cause disproportionate harm, particularly as individuals defamed in Parliament have no right of reply or judicial remedy.
  10. Moral Obligation of Restraint: Members, as public representatives, bear heightened responsibility. Abuse of immunity can undermine citizens’ rights who otherwise rely on courts for protection.

What Is the Constitutional Philosophy Behind Freedom of Speech in Parliament?

  1. Parliamentary Privilege: Recognised as essential for smooth functioning of Legislature.
  2. Erskine May Doctrine: Identifies freedom of speech as the principal privilege of Parliament.
  3. Functional Necessity: Enables free, frank, and fearless debate.
  4. Executive Accountability: Question Hour and debates ensure government transparency.
  5. Democratic Legitimacy: Parliamentary criticism strengthens governance rather than weakens it.

Does Expunction of Parliamentary Speeches Undermine Article 105?

  1. Article 105 Protection: Guarantees freedom of speech in Parliament subject only to constitutional limitations, not arbitrary procedural curtailment.
  2. Expunction Power: Rules permit presiding officers to remove unparliamentary, defamatory, indecent, or undignified words, not entire arguments.
  3. Constitutional Supremacy: Rules of procedure cannot override constitutional rights.
  4. Risk of Mindless Application: Excessive deletions may distort legislative record and infringe MPs’ privileges.
  5. Institutional Record: Parliamentary debates are preserved for posterity; arbitrary removal affects historical and legal accountability.

How Do Parliamentary Rules Balance Decorum and Democratic Debate?

  1. Procedural Regulation: Rules regulate sub judice matters, personal allegations, and defamatory statements.
  2. Legislative Dignity: Ensures debate does not degrade into personal attacks.
  3. Proportionality Principle: Regulation must target specific offensive words, not suppress substantive criticism.
  4. Presiding Officer’s Duty: Ensures decorum while safeguarding members’ constitutional privilege.

Can Procedural Rules Be Weaponised Against the Opposition?

  1. Political Neutrality Requirement: Presiding officers must function impartially to maintain institutional credibility.
  2. Selective Enforcement Risk: Unequal application of expunction powers erodes trust.
  3. Opposition’s Constitutional Role: Essential for scrutiny of executive actions.
  4. Attempted Disqualification: Parliament lacks power to disqualify members outside the constitutional framework (Articles 102 and 103).
  5. Democratic Breakdown Indicator: Curtailing opposition speech signals weakening of deliberative culture.

How Does the Government-Opposition Relationship Shape Democratic Stability?

  1. Constructive Opposition: Criticism provides corrective feedback.
  2. Institutional Forbearance: Democratic survival depends on mutual restraint.
  3. Majority-Minority Balance: Majority governs; minority critiques.
  4. Historical Practice: Prime Minister Nehru regularly attended Question Hour and listened to opposition speeches, reinforcing institutional respect.
  5. Erosion Risk: Breakdown of dialogue weakens parliamentary culture.

What Are the Institutional and Governance Implications?

  1. Accountability Deficit: Restricting debate reduces executive scrutiny.
  2. Transparency Impact: Incomplete records distort public understanding.
  3. Legitimacy Concerns: Perception of bias weakens institutional credibility.
  4. Democratic Norms: Healthy dissent is integral to constitutional morality.
  5. Long-Term Precedent: Expansive interpretation of expunction powers may institutionalise executive dominance.

Conclusion

Freedom of speech in Parliament is not merely a privilege of MPs but a safeguard for democracy. Procedural rules must regulate debate without diminishing constitutional guarantees. Sustaining institutional neutrality and respecting dissent are essential to preserving the credibility of India’s parliamentary democracy.

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2021] To what extent, in your view, the Parliament is able to ensure accountability of the executive in India?

Linkage: Parliament ensures executive accountability through debates, Question Hour, motions, and parliamentary privileges under Article 105. Recent expunction controversies raise concerns about whether this constitutional freedom is being effectively exercised to hold the executive accountable.

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