Can the Largest Party Alone Claim Governmental Invitation Without Proving Constitutional Majority Capability?
Can Constitutional Governance Permit Political Experimentation at Public Cost?
A Constitutional Analysis of Hung Assembly, Government Formation, and Gubernatorial Discretion in Tamil Nadu
—M.Murali Mohan , Advocate.
I. Introduction
The Constitution of India adopts the Westminster model of parliamentary democracy where executive legitimacy flows from majority confidence in the Legislative Assembly and not merely from constitutional appointment. Within this constitutional structure, the Governor occupies an important constitutional office intended to preserve continuity of governance and facilitate constitutional transition during periods of political uncertainty. However, the office was never designed to function as an independent political authority possessing unrestricted discretion in matters of governmental formation.
The constitutional discussions emerging from Tamil Nadu acquire significance in the context of an electoral configuration where no political formation may immediately cross the constitutional majority mark in the 234-member Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly.
The constitutional majority benchmark in a full House remains:
(234÷2)+1=118\left(234 \div 2\right) + 1 = 118(234÷2)+1=118
Where no political formation reaches 118, the constitutional situation becomes one of a hung Assembly. In such circumstances, important constitutional questions arise concerning:
governmental legitimacy,
the constitutional role of the Governor,
the status of the single largest political formation,
the requirement of prima facie majority capability,
and the constitutional process governing invitation to form government.
The central constitutional issue therefore becomes:
Can Numerical Plurality Alone Create Constitutional Entitlement to Government Formation?\text{Can Numerical Plurality Alone Create Constitutional Entitlement to Government Formation?}Can Numerical Plurality Alone Create Constitutional Entitlement to Government Formation?
Modern constitutional jurisprudence increasingly answers this question in the negative.
The Constitution ultimately recognizes only one decisive source of executive legitimacy:
Majority Confidence of the Legislative Assembly\text{Majority Confidence of the Legislative Assembly}Majority Confidence of the Legislative Assembly
II. Constitutional Structure of Parliamentary Government
The constitutional position of the Governor must be understood within the broader framework of parliamentary democracy established by the Constitution of India.
Article 154 formally vests executive power of the State in the Governor. Yet Articles 163 and 164 simultaneously ensure that actual governance remains vested in the elected Council of Ministers headed by the Chief Minister.
Thus, the Constitution deliberately separates nominal constitutional authority from real executive power:
Governor=Constitutional Head\text{Governor} = \text{Constitutional Head}Governor=Constitutional Head
while
Council of Ministers=Real Executive Authority\text{Council of Ministers} = \text{Real Executive Authority}Council of Ministers=Real Executive Authority
This distinction forms the constitutional foundation of responsible government under parliamentary democracy.
The Governor therefore functions as a constitutional sentinel ensuring continuity of governance and constitutional process, and not as a political sovereign possessing independent democratic legitimacy.
III. Article 163 and the Nature of Constitutional Discretion
Article 163 establishes that the Governor ordinarily acts on the aid and advice of the Council of Ministers except in limited situations where constitutional discretion is expressly provided or necessarily implied.
A hung Assembly constitutes one such constitutional situation where temporary gubernatorial discretion becomes operational.
However, constitutional discretion was never intended to become unrestricted political authority.
Accordingly:
Constitutional Discretion≠Independent Political Choice\text{Constitutional Discretion} \neq \text{Independent Political Choice}Constitutional Discretion=Independent Political Choice
The Governor cannot constitutionally substitute personal or ideological preference for democratic legitimacy emerging from legislative support.
The constitutional role remains:
transitional,
procedural,
constitutionally reviewable,
and subordinate to legislative determination.
IV. Hung Assembly and Government Formation
Where elections produce a fractured verdict and no political formation reaches the majority mark of 118, the constitutional situation becomes one of a hung Assembly.
In such circumstances, the Governor acquires limited constitutional discretion for the sole purpose of identifying the political formation most likely to command confidence of the House.
Yet even in a hung Assembly, the Governor does not become an unrestricted constitutional authority.
The Constitution does not authorize the Governor:
to create political alignments,
to select governments according to personal preference,
to indefinitely delay governmental formation,
or to bypass demonstrated legislative majority.
The constitutional obligation remains confined to facilitating formation of a government capable of securing majority confidence in the Legislative Assembly.
Thus:
Hung Assembly≠Unrestricted Gubernatorial Authority\text{Hung Assembly} \neq \text{Unrestricted Gubernatorial Authority}Hung Assembly=Unrestricted Gubernatorial Authority
V. Numerical Plurality versus Constitutional Majority
In constitutional discussions concerning hung Assemblies, an important distinction must be maintained between:
numerical plurality,
andconstitutional majority capability.
A political formation may emerge as the single largest party in the Legislative Assembly without actually possessing majority support necessary for governmental formation.
For example, where a political formation led by Vijay secures approximately 107 or 108 seats in a 234-member House, such numerical strength may establish political plurality but not constitutional majority.
Accordingly:
Largest Party Alone≠Constitutional Majority\text{Largest Party Alone} \neq \text{Constitutional Majority}Largest Party Alone=Constitutional Majority
The Governor’s constitutional obligation is therefore not merely to identify the numerically largest formation, but to determine whether the claimant prima facie demonstrates realistic constitutional capability to secure majority confidence in the House.
VI. Prima Facie Majority Capability and Governmental Invitation
In a hung Assembly, invitation to form government cannot rest solely upon emergence as the single largest party.
The claimant must prima facie demonstrate constitutional capability to command majority support in the Legislative Assembly.
Accordingly, the Governor may constitutionally require:
letters of support,
coalition commitments,
alliance agreements,
independent backing,
or other objective constitutional material indicating realistic majority formation.
The constitutional objective is not ceremonial invitation but stable governmental formation consistent with parliamentary democracy.
Thus:
Invitation Requires Prima Facie Majority Capability\text{Invitation Requires Prima Facie Majority Capability}Invitation Requires Prima Facie Majority Capability
This principle prevents arbitrary governmental formation based merely upon numerical plurality while simultaneously preventing unrestricted gubernatorial discretion.
The Governor therefore acts constitutionally where invitation is based not upon political preference, but upon objective constitutional assessment regarding realistic majority possibility subject ultimately to floor-test verification.
VII. Constitutional Convention and the Vajpayee Precedent
An important constitutional reference in the jurisprudence of hung legislatures emerged following the 1996 Lok Sabha elections where Bharatiya Janata Party under the leadership of Atal Bihari Vajpayee emerged as the single largest political party but did not possess majority support in the House.
President Shankar Dayal Sharma nevertheless invited Vajpayee to form the government and prove majority on the floor of the House.
The constitutional significance of the episode lies in the fact that the invitation was treated as a provisional constitutional opportunity and not as conclusive recognition of majority legitimacy.
The Vajpayee ministry subsequently resigned before completion of the floor-test process upon inability to secure sufficient majority support.
The constitutional principle emerging from the episode may therefore be expressed thus:
Initial Invitation≠Final Constitutional Majority\text{Initial Invitation} \neq \text{Final Constitutional Majority}Initial Invitation=Final Constitutional Majority
At the same time, subsequent constitutional jurisprudence evolved toward a more structured doctrine emphasizing:
prima facie majority capability,
coalition viability,
and demonstrable governability.
Accordingly, modern constitutional analysis increasingly recognizes that numerical plurality alone may not automatically create unconditional entitlement to governmental invitation in the absence of realistic majority possibility.
VIII. Constitutional Options Available in a Hung Assembly
In a hung Assembly situation, constitutional pathways remain open to a political formation even where it does not immediately possess the majority benchmark of 118.
Accordingly, a political formation led by Vijay may constitutionally seek governmental invitation by:
demonstrating post-poll support,
securing coalition arrangements,
obtaining support from independent legislators,
or placing objective constitutional material before the Governor indicating realistic majority capability.
The constitutional relevance therefore lies not merely in numerical plurality, but in demonstrable governability.
Thus:
Prima Facie Governability=Constitutional Relevance in a Hung Assembly\text{Prima Facie Governability} = \text{Constitutional Relevance in a Hung Assembly}Prima Facie Governability=Constitutional Relevance in a Hung Assembly
The constitutional process therefore does not automatically exclude the single largest formation, nor does it guarantee governmental invitation solely on the basis of plurality.
Instead, parliamentary democracy requires eventual proof of legislative confidence on the floor of the House.
IX. Floor Test and Constitutional Legitimacy
Indian constitutional jurisprudence consistently recognizes that questions concerning majority must ordinarily be determined on the floor of the Legislative Assembly.
This doctrine attained constitutional finality through decisions including:
Jagdambika Pal Case,
Rameshwar Prasad v. Union of India,
and Nabam Rebia v. Deputy Speaker.
Although S.R. Bommai v. Union of India primarily concerned dismissal of an existing ministry under Article 356, the broader democratic doctrine emerging from the judgment subsequently became foundational to majority-determination jurisprudence.
The constitutional principle now firmly remains:
Assembly Floor=Final Constitutional Forum for Majority Determination\text{Assembly Floor} = \text{Final Constitutional Forum for Majority Determination}Assembly Floor=Final Constitutional Forum for Majority Determination
The Governor may identify majority possibility, but only the Legislative Assembly determines majority reality.
X. Article 164 and the Doctrine of “Pleasure”
Article 164 provides that Ministers hold office during the pleasure of the Governor. Historically, this expression occasionally generated misunderstanding regarding gubernatorial authority.
However, the Supreme Court decisively clarified the constitutional position in:
Shamsher Singh v. State of Punjab
The Court held that the Governor is merely a constitutional head and that real executive authority belongs to the elected ministry responsible to the Legislative Assembly.
Consequently:
Governor’s Pleasure≠Personal Political Authority\text{Governor's Pleasure} \neq \text{Personal Political Authority}Governor’s Pleasure=Personal Political Authority
If a ministry commands confidence of the House, democratic legitimacy constitutionally prevails over gubernatorial preference.
XI. Constitutional Morality and Institutional Restraint
The constitutional discussions emerging from Tamil Nadu revive foundational principles concerning:
democratic legitimacy,
parliamentary accountability,
institutional neutrality,
and constitutional restraint.
Dr. B.R. Ambedkar repeatedly emphasized that constitutional morality is indispensable for parliamentary democracy.
Constitutional governance depends not merely upon written provisions but also upon:
restraint in exercise of constitutional power,
adherence to democratic conventions,
and institutional discipline.
The office of the Governor especially depends upon constitutional restraint because parliamentary democracy cannot function where constitutional discretion transforms into political discretion.
Thus:
Constitutional Morality=Restraint in Exercise of Constitutional Power\text{Constitutional Morality} = \text{Restraint in Exercise of Constitutional Power}Constitutional Morality=Restraint in Exercise of Constitutional Power
The Governor therefore functions as constitutional guardian and not constitutional sovereign.
XII. Final Constitutional Position
The constitutional structure of India ultimately recognizes one decisive democratic doctrine:
Governments Are Formed and Sustained by Legislative Majority\text{Governments Are Formed and Sustained by Legislative Majority}Governments Are Formed and Sustained by Legislative Majority
In a hung Assembly, the Governor may exercise limited transitional discretion to identify the political formation most likely to command majority confidence. However, such discretion remains temporary, constitutionally reviewable, and subordinate to legislative determination.
Mere emergence as the single largest political formation does not by itself create an unconditional constitutional entitlement to governmental invitation.
Invitation to form government constitutionally requires prima facie majority capability capable of eventual verification on the floor of the Legislative Assembly.
Accordingly, where a political formation does not immediately possess the constitutional benchmark of 118 in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly, the more constitutionally sustainable course may not necessarily be formation of a short-lived minority government dependent upon uncertain support, but maintenance of constitutional equilibrium within a hung Assembly framework until a stable and demonstrable majority configuration emerges consistent with parliamentary democracy.
The constitutional objective is not merely governmental installation, but stable, accountable, and sustainable governance consistent with legislative confidence. Parliamentary democracy cannot encourage unstable governmental experimentation resulting in recurring political uncertainty, administrative disruption, and avoidable burden upon public resources and public administration.
Thus:
Constitutional Stability>Temporary Numerical Plurality\text{Constitutional Stability} > \text{Temporary Numerical Plurality}Constitutional Stability>Temporary Numerical Plurality
From:
Shamsher Singh v. State of Punjab,
throughRameshwar Prasad v. Union of India,
toNabam Rebia v. Deputy Speaker,
Indian constitutional jurisprudence consistently reinforces one foundational constitutional principle:
In a parliamentary democracy, governmental legitimacy belongs exclusively to the political formation capable of commanding majority confidence in the Legislative Assembly, and constitutional authority cannot substitute numerical plurality for constitutional majority.
