Kerala HC orders 20 Thiruvananthapuram BJP councillors to retake oath
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Kerala High Court on Wednesday directed 20 Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) councillors of the Thiruvananthapuram Corporation to retake their oath of office within four weeks, after a court challenge alleged that several of them had sworn in the names of specific deities rather than following the format prescribed under municipal rules. The order revives a politically sensitive dispute in the state capital that has been simmering since the beginning of the year.
Background to the Dispute
The controversy traces back to January 2025, when a division bench of the High Court issued notices to the councillors on a petition filed by Communist Party of India (Marxist) [CPI(M)] councillor S.P. Deepak. Deepak challenged the validity of the oaths, arguing that swearing in the names of multiple gods and deities rendered them legally invalid under the statutory format governing elected representatives.
The court had previously observed that the prescribed format requires elected representatives either to swear in the name of God — in the singular — or to make a solemn affirmation. The bench had questioned how an oath invoking multiple deities could be treated as compliant with that format.
What the Court Ordered
Acting on the petition, the High Court on Wednesday directed all 20 BJP councillors to retake their oaths within four weeks. The court, however, declined an earlier interim plea by Deepak that would have restrained the councillors from attending corporation meetings and drawing honorarium pending the final outcome. The councillors have been allowed to continue in office, with the validity of their original oaths remaining subject to the case's final resolution.
What the Petitioner Said
S.P. Deepak said the order vindicated his contention that accepted norms and procedures governing the oath had been violated. According to him, some councillors had invoked the names of specific deities rather than adhering to the prescribed wording, which he argued was a procedural breach with legal consequences.
Political Significance
The dispute carries outsized political weight because the BJP, for the first time in Kerala's history, had captured the Thiruvananthapuram Corporation — ousting the CPI(M), which had held the civic body for over four decades. The oath controversy, initiated by a CPI(M) councillor, has been widely read as part of the broader political contest over the corporation. The court's direction to retake oaths stops short of invalidating the councillors' tenure but adds a layer of legal uncertainty to the BJP's landmark civic win.
The case is expected to return to court for a final hearing once the fresh oaths are administered.