AAP MLA Chaitar Vasava faces disqualification after 7-year conviction in Gujarat
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) MLA Chaitar Vasava is staring at imminent disqualification from the Gujarat Legislative Assembly after a Sessions Court in Narmada district convicted him and eight co-accused on 24 June in a 2023 case involving the alleged assault, intimidation, and obstruction of forest department personnel. Sentenced to seven years in prison and fined ₹25,000, Vasava now faces the consequences of Section 8(3) of the Representation of the People Act, which mandates immediate disqualification for any legislator sentenced to two years or more.
What the Conviction Means Legally
Under Section 8(3) of the Representation of the People Act, an MP or MLA convicted of a crime and sentenced to two years or more is immediately disqualified from office and remains barred for six years after release. The provision was reinforced by the Supreme Court's landmark Lily Thomas judgment, which struck down earlier legal protections that had allowed convicted lawmakers to continue in office pending appeal.
Senior advocate Anandvardhan Yagnik said Vasava's immediate recourse is to challenge the verdict before a higher court. 'He has to file an appeal and get the sentencing suspended,' Yagnik said. He added that the seven-year sentence places the Dediapada legislator at direct risk of losing his Assembly membership.
The Appeal Process and What Courts Will Examine
Former president of the Gujarat High Court Advocates' Association, Brijesh Trivedi, outlined two possible scenarios depending on the High Court's decision. 'Once they approach the higher forum, in this case the Gujarat High Court, he will have a right of appeal, and if in the appeal the sentence is stayed and suspended, then he will continue to be on bail, and that sentence will remain suspended till the final decision by the higher court,' Trivedi said.
'If the High Court does not suspend the sentence but grants him bail during the pendency of the appeal, in that situation, he will lose the right to continue as an MLA,' he added. According to Trivedi, the appellate court will scrutinise whether there were legal infirmities in the trial court's appreciation of evidence — and that 'unless they point out the perversity in appreciation, they cannot be granted any relief.'
Vasava's lawyers have indicated that a criminal appeal will be filed before the Gujarat High Court within the prescribed limitation period, which can extend up to 60 days.
The Assembly Secretariat's Role
Former Gujarat Assembly Speaker and ex-Cabinet Minister Rajendra Trivedi described the disqualification process as largely administrative once official conviction records reach the Assembly Secretariat. 'The prosecutor will send it to the Legal Department. The Legal Department will send it to the Secretary of the Legislative Assembly. The Secretary will prepare the papers and immediately place them before the Speaker,' he said.
Rajendra Trivedi clarified that no separate proposal from another legislator is required to trigger the process. 'No proposal is required. This is the legal route,' he said, noting that where the sentence is two years or more, 'the person automatically ceases to be an MLA,' with the Speaker formally declaring the cessation upon receiving the necessary records.
A Deepening Crisis for AAP in Gujarat
The verdict arrives at a sensitive moment for the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) in Gujarat, which won five seats in the 2022 Assembly elections but has since navigated a series of organisational setbacks. Less than a year ago, Botad MLA Umesh Makwana resigned from party posts and was subsequently suspended. The party did, however, regain the Visavadar Assembly seat in a recent bypoll.
Vasava is among the AAP's most prominent tribal leaders and a key figure in South Gujarat's tribal belt. He was fielded by the party as its Bharuch Lok Sabha candidate even while facing other legal proceedings. His conviction, therefore, strikes at the AAP's efforts to consolidate influence among tribal voters in the state.
What Happens Next
As of now, Vasava technically remains an MLA until a formal order is passed, according to legal experts. The speed with which the Gujarat High Court hears his appeal — and crucially, whether it suspends the sentence — will determine whether the AAP retains one of its most visible legislators or faces yet another reduction in its already slim legislative footprint in the state.