Constitutional Supremacy Over Administrative Convenience: High Court Mandates Timely Local Elections in Himachal Pradesh
In the case of Dikken Kumar Thakur &Anr. v. State of H.P. &Ors., a Division Bench of the High Court of Himachal Pradesh addressed a constitutional crisis involving the delay of elections for Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) and Urban Local Bodies (ULBs). The Court ruled that the constitutional mandate to hold elections before the expiry of a five-year term is absolute and cannot be bypassed by statutory orders issued under the Disaster Management (DM) Act or administrative delays in delimitation.
The Core Conflict: Article 243E vs. The DM Act
The case arose because the terms of various PRIs were set to expire in January 2026. While the State Election Commission (SEC) had begun preparations, the State’s Chief Secretary, acting as Chairman of the State Disaster Management Authority (SDMA), issued an order on October 8, 2025, directing that elections be held only after road connectivity—damaged during the 2025 monsoon—was fully restored.
The Court’s findings on this conflict were definitive:
- Constitutional Primacy: The Court held that while the DM Act has an overriding effect over other statutes, it cannot override the Constitution of India.
- The Five-Year Limit: Under Article 243E, every Panchayat continues for five years “and no longer”. The Court clarified that the six-month window allowed for reconstitution after a dissolution is an exception for emergencies, not a right the Government can claim for its own convenience.
- Independence of the SEC: The SEC is an independent constitutional body. The State Executive (including the Chief Secretary and Deputy Commissioners) has a duty to assist the SEC and cannot unilaterally declare its actions void or stop the collection of election materials.
Rejection of Administrative Delays
The State argued that elections should be postponed due to ongoing delimitation processes, pending census data, and clashing with school board examinations in March. The Court rejected these justifications:
- Census and Delimitation: Citing Supreme Court precedents, the High Court noted that delimitation is a “continuous exercise” and should not stall the democratic process; elections can proceed on a notional basis using 2011 Census data if fresh delimitation is pending.
- Resource Management: The Court observed that the State could deploy employees from non-educational departments to conduct elections, thereby avoiding interference with student examinations.
- Lack of Evidence: The Court found no material evidence that the effects of the 2025 monsoon still maintained a “gravity and magnitude” sufficient to prevent the democratic process from moving forward in late 2025 or early 2026.
Conclusion and Final Mandate
The Court criticized the “tug-of-war” between the State Executive and the SEC, noting that the government appeared to be using various legal shields to defer elections indefinitely. To resolve the impasse, the Court issued the following directives:
- Cooperation: All state departments, the SDMA, and the SEC must work harmoniously, with the SEC performing the role of “elder brother” in the process .
- Timeline: All preparatory processes (delimitation and reservation rosters) must be completed by the State departments by February 28, 2026 .
- Final Deadline: The State Election Commission must complete the conduct of all elections on or before April 30, 2026.
Himachal Pradesh High Court
Dikken Kumar Thakur &Anr. V. State of Himachal Pradesh &Ors. : STPL (Web) 2026 HP 22





