Context & Background
- Article 200 of the Indian Constitution deals with the Governor’s powers with respect to assent to Bills passed by the State Legislature.
- In the Tamil Nadu case, the Governor withheld assent to 10 Bills in the first instance.
- When the Tamil Nadu Assembly re-passed the same Bills (as per first proviso to Article 200), the Governor then referred them to the President — triggering a constitutional dispute.
Relevance : GS2 ( Polity & Governance)

Key Supreme Court Observations
- Governor has no second chance to refer a Bill to the President:
- If a Bill is re-passed and presented again, the Governor must give assent — he cannot withhold it or reserve it for the President.
- Reference to Article 200:
- Once the Assembly reconsiders and re-passes the Bill under the first proviso to Article 200, the Governor “shall not withhold assent”.
- This creates a constitutional mandate — not a discretion.
- Reservation for President’s consideration (Article 200 & 201) must be done only in the first instance, if required.
- Governor’s decision not bona fide:
- The court found the TN Governor’s action of withholding once, then referring to the President later, as not made in good faith.
- Historical comparison:
- The Court noted the removal of the phrase “in his discretion” from Section 75 of the Government of India Act, 1935, when evolving into Article 200.
- This indicates that Governors no longer enjoy independent discretion in such matters under the Constitution.
Constitutional Provisions Referenced
- Article 200:
- Allows Governor to:
- Assent to a Bill
- Withhold assent
- Reserve the Bill for the President
- Return the Bill (if not a Money Bill) for reconsideration
- First Proviso: If the Bill is returned and re-passed, the Governor must give assent — no other options.
- Allows Governor to:
- Article 201:
- Deals with Bills reserved for President’s consideration.
Legal and Governance Implications
- Curtails misuse of constitutional provisions by Governors for political or arbitrary reasons.
- Reinforces legislative supremacy of the elected State Assembly after reconsideration.
- Establishes that Governor is a constitutional figurehead, not an independent veto-wielding authority.
- Prevents executive delay tactics — promotes accountability and adherence to constitutional timeframes.
- Sets precedent: Strengthens the constitutional convention and judicial oversight over gubernatorial overreach.