Advertisement
The Karnataka Cabinet on Monday gave its consent to provide internal reservation among Scheduled Castes (SC) and decided to constitute a commission under a retired High Court judge that will be tasked with collecting empirical data.
“If at all Chief Minister Siddaramaiah was serious about internal reservation, also on the Kantharaj report (on Socio-Economic and Education Survey, popularly known as the caste census) he would have taken action long back, but Siddaramaiah and Congress party only believes in taking political advantage and creating more confusion on this particular issue,” Vijayendra said in response to a question on internal reservation.
Speaking to reporters here, he said, “I don’t think the chief minister or the Congress government is honest on this particular issue. The BJP has repeatedly made it clear (its stand) on the subject, but Siddaramaiah and Congress party when by-elections are round the corner, they are trying to politicise this issue, but they are not honest on this subject.” Channapatna, Shiggaon and Sandur Assembly segments are going for bypolls on November 13.
Related Articles
Advertisement
Just ahead of the Assembly polls, the then BJP government’s Cabinet had taken a decision on internal reservation, by recommending to Central government a six per cent internal quota for SC (Left), 5.5 per cent for SC (Right), 4.5 per cent for “touchables” (Banjara, Bhovi, Korcha, Kuruma etc) and one per cent for others.
The present Cabinet’s decision on Monday was on the backdrop of a landmark verdict by the Supreme Court on August 1, which held that states are constitutionally empowered to make sub-classifications within the Scheduled Castes, which form a socially heterogeneous class, for granting reservation for the uplift of castes that are socially and educationally more backward.
A seven-judge constitution bench headed by Chief Justice D Y Chandrachud, by a majority of 6:1, set aside the apex court’s five-judge bench verdict of 2004 in the EV Chinnaiah vs State of Andhra Pradesh case which had held that no sub-classification of Scheduled Castes (SCs) can be allowed as they are a homogeneous class in themselves.