TN clips Governors powers, adopts Bill to appoint university VCs
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TN clips Governor's powers, adopts Bill to appoint university VCs

In states including Gujarat, it's the state governments, not governors, that appoint vice-chancellors, says TN Chief Minister MK Stalin


The Tamil Nadu Assembly on Monday adopted a Bill empowering the state government to appoint vice-chancellors to various universities in the state, in an apparent bid to clip the wings of the Governor on the matter.

Chief Minister MK Stalin recalled that the Punchhi Commission on Centre-State relations had, while dealing with the subject of VC appointments, said “there would be a clash of functions and powers” if the authority to choose the top academician was wrested with the Governor.

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The ruling DMK’s move came on a day when Governor RN Ravi inaugurated a two-day conference of VCs at Udhagamandalam, attended by among others, Zoho Corporation CEO Sridhar Vembu, whose participation in the event was questioned by the Congress. The governor is the Chancellor of 13 varsities in the state, Stalin pointed out, with the Higher Education Minister being the Pro-Chancellor.

On Monday, Higher Education Minister K Ponmudy tabled the Bill to amend the Tamil Nadu Universities Laws to allow the state government to appoint VCs to the varsities. The BJP opposed the Bill at the introductory stage while the main opposition AIADMK, taking exception to a remark on late Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa by Congress Legislature Party leader K Selvaperunthagai, staged a walkout ahead of the passage of the Bill.

The procedure elsewhere

Earlier, Stalin, while appealing for the House’s support to the government’s initiative, said that even in Gujarat, the home state of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the vice-chancellors are not appointed by the governor but by the state. Same was the case with Telangana, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh, he said.

Incidentally, the MVA coalition government in Maharashtra, headed by Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray, had initiated a similar move last December. In Kerala, Governor
Arif Mohammad Khan has been engaged in a long-drawn tussle with the Pinarayi Vijayan government over the appointment of university vice-chancellors.

Stalin, in his speech on the floor of the House, said the state government being not empowered to select the vice-chancellors created a “big impact” on higher education.
While the practice by the Governor earlier was to consult the state government before selecting the vice chancellors, “there has been a change in this in the past few years,” he said.

In an apparent reference to the previous AIADMK government, Stalin said that in the last four years, the Governor acted as if the appointment was his “exclusive right” and did not respect the state government that was providing higher education. “A government elected by the people being unable to appoint a vice-chancellor to a university run by it creates a lot of issues in the overall varsity administration. This is against the democratic principles,” Stalin said.

He further said the Punchhi Commission had recommended against appointment of VCs by the Governor, a post “not provided in the Constitution”, reasoning that such power will lead to controversies and criticism. “There would be clash of functions and powers,” between the state government and the Governor, he quoted the commission as stating.

With agency inputs

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