The occasion should have been routine - the retirement of the Chief Justice of India. Since Independence, the nation has had 50 CJIs in about 75 years, which makes it around one such event every 18 months. There is the usual excitement about the incoming new Chief for a few days and then the routine farewell goodbyes to the outgoing Chief, recounting his initiatives and efforts at 'judicial reforms'. And soon it is history. The name disappears from public discourse. Over and out.
This time, it has been rather different. The retirement last month of the respected Chief Justice DY Chandrachud continues to excite widespread comment and debate about the 'legacy' that he has left behind. There is, by and large, disappointment and worse about his innings of two years where he was widely expected to set right some glaring shortfalls between promise and performance, between anticipated and actual achievement. The stakeholder society at large, was fondly hopeful that he would set right the growing perception that somehow the delicate 'balance of power' between the ruling Executive and the Judiciary was tilting in favour of the former.
It is the experience of universal social dynamics that where expectations are high, and these are belied, the disappointment is deep. After all, the Chief had the best credentials for a top scorer, a 'man of the match' material. He was the youngest judge appointed to any High Court in India. He had done his law at Harvard. His respected late father was likewise the Chief Justice of India who served the longest in the Apex Court, a man of impeccable integrity. It could be confidently said that legal acumen was embedded in his genes. And he was widely cheered even before he started his innings.
This story is from the January 09, 2025 edition of The Statesman.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the January 09, 2025 edition of The Statesman.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Annual celebration at Udaypur Haradayal Nag Adarsha Vidyalaya captivates everyone
A gala event featuring a collage of musical genres, poetry, dance drama, and an exhibition of karate and taekwondo captivated the audience at the annual sports, cultural, and prize distribution ceremony of Udaypur Haradayal Nag Adarsha Vidyalaya for Girls.
'Nationalists must win, not devotees of Moeed Khan'
Uttar Pradesh chief minister accuses SP of opposing BRAMmbedkar, siding with mafia elements
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh flags off 'SANJAY' Battlefield Surveillance System
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh flagged off the 'SANJAY Battlefield Surveillance System (BSS)' from the South Block, here today.
Saranagati celebrates India's classical dance heritage
Saranagati is celebrated every year by Bismillah Khan Yuva Puraskar awardee Avijit Das for the noble purpose of schooling dancers enrolled under him to other dance forms.
Bride, grooms test for thalassemia before mass marriage
At a time when the state health department has repeatedly requested young people to get their blood tested before marriage to get rid of thalassemia, a mass marriage was held in Bagbazar where the young couples followed the government instruction.
Politics follows a cycle
AIl India Mahila Congress president Alka Lamba is set to contest the Delhi Assembly polls from Kalkaji.
Dirty and dangerous
It is no secret that fossil fuel-powered vehicles pollute the air and harm public health.
Pillars of Caste ~ II
When a country has developed and perfected an elaborate system of segregation and discrimination against a large group of its own people, it is only natural that another regime seeking such marginalisation against another group would draw lessons from it. In the early days of the Third Reich, Franz Gurtner, the Reich minister of justice was chairing a meeting of 17 legal luminaries to finalise a legal framework to turn their ideology into law for an Aryan nation. The first item on their agenda was what they could learn from the United States in this regard
Telangana minister lashes out at district collector
Telangana Revenue Minister Ponnala Srinivas Reddy was caught on camera lashing out at district collector of Karimnagar, Pamela Satpathy, during an inauguration programme attended by Union Minister Manohar Khattar.
Skill development initiatives: Bridging the gap between education and employment
India, with its vast reserve of human resources, is currently undergoing a noteworthy revolution in making its young workforce employable.