Author: ADV.JAGRITIKEDIA

MS. Jagriti Kedia is an advocate practicing before the Delhi High Court, with experience in civil, corporate, and criminal matters. She regularly advises clients on litigation strategy, dispute resolution, and compliance, and is deeply interested in issues of constitutional governance and federalism.

In Tamil Nadu, Democracy Was Made to Wait The Supreme Court’s 2025 ruling ensures that Governors can’t bury the people’s mandate under paperwork. The Day the Constitution Froze For months, democracy in Tamil Nadu was trapped in a file. Bills that had sailed through the Legislative Assembly—on universities, welfare, and governance—reached Raj Bhavan and vanished into silence. No assent, no return, no explanation. Just stillness. Governance stalled. Ministers fumed. Citizens waited. That silence, the Supreme Court finally ruled in State of Tamil Nadu v. Governor of Tamil Nadu (2025), was not constitutional caution—it was constitutional defiance. And with that, the…

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Introduction The Supreme Court’s decision in AGI Greenpac v. Hindustan National Glass Industries has redrawn the contours of India’s insolvency process. For the first time, the Court has held that when a resolution plan qualifies as a “combination” under the Competition Act, 2002, it cannot even be placed before the Committee of Creditors (CoC) unless it has already secured Competition Commission of India (CCI) approval. In effect, creditors are prohibited from voting on any plan that lacks prior clearance. At first glance, the ruling appears sensible: it avoids creditors approving a plan that regulators later strike down. But on closer…

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