REVISITING THE BASIC STRUCTURE DOCTRINE AND CONSTITUTIONAL MORALITY: THE IMPLICATIONS OF GRANTING PARLIAMENTARY PRIVILEGE TO BRIBERY
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NLUJ
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practices vis-à-vis parliamentary privileges to the fore. This paper delves into the
relationship between bribery and parliamentary privileges from the perspective of the basic
structure doctrine and the concept of constitutional morality. The purpose of this piece is
not to delve into the technicalities of each case, but to explore the implications of the
inclusion of bribery on overarching constitutional values. First, it provides a brief context
of the concept of parliamentary privileges in India. Then it examines the relationship of
such privileges with the basic structure doctrine and constitutional morality to analyse the
impact of the inclusion of bribery on the features of these principles such as the rule of
law, democracy, free and fair elections, justice, equality, etc. Second, other areas of
jurisdictions including England, Australia, the USA, etc. which have excluded such
corrupt practices from the ambit of parliamentary privileges have been presented to verify
the possibility of choosing a similar approach for the Indian context. Third and finally,
the paper concludes by highlighting that a grant of immunity to bribery would violate the
basic structure doctrine and transcend constitutional morality, and thus be disallowed
from immunity.
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8 (2) CCAL (2024)
