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‘Will open Pandora’s box to blackmail': What SC said while refusing to bring political parties under POSH

Published on: Sep 16, 2025 04:24 PM IST

The top court held that political parties cannot be seen as “workplaces”.

The Supreme Court has dismissed a plea seeking to bring registered political parties under the ambit of the Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition, and Redressal) Act, 2013.

The Supreme Court pointed out that no procedure currently exists for determining whether a person has been practising Islam for five years. Until such rules are notified by the central government under the Act, it declared, the provision cannot be enforced. (HT)(HT_PRINT)

Refusing to extend the law to political parties, the top court held that they cannot be seen as “workplaces”, adding that the members usually join voluntarily without remuneration and are not “employees”.

The SC was hearing a special leave petition, filed by a lawyer, which challenged a 2022 Kerala high court judgement that said political parties were not obligated to constitute Internal Complaints Committees under the POSH Act.

Lawyers' arguments and SC verdict

• Senior advocate Shobha Gupta, appearing for petitioner Yogamaya MG, argued that the POSH Act deliberately included broad definitions for “workplace”, “employer” and “employee”.

• Gupta said that the Act had provided no exceptions for any entity, whether public or private, adding that exclusion of political parties from POSH would leave women workers in politics unsupported.

 
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