The mention assumes significance as the President had on Tuesday signed a proclamation bringing Arunachal Pradesh under central rule on grounds of "Constitutional breakdown".
The decision has come under the scanner of the Supreme Court which has sought the report of Governor Jyoti Prasad Rajkhowa recommending central rule in the state. While seeking the report, the court described imposition of President's rule in the north-eastern state as "too serious a matter".
He said the fact that President's rule was proclaimed on 108 occasions in different states during first 50 years of Republic, till March 2001, "seems to lend some weight to this charge".
"Though the imposition of President's rule under Article 356 can be liable to misuse, procedural changes over the years have somewhat reduced that possibility," Mukherjee says.
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Mukherjee cited a landmark judgement of Supreme Court which says "The President could not take any irreversible action under clauses A, B and C of Article 356 (1)-which means that the state Legislative Assembly cannot be dissolved till the proclamation is approved by both Houses of Parliament".
The softening of the powers to declare President's rule notwithstanding, critics continued to suggest a unitary bias in our federal structure, he writes in the book 'The Turbulent Years: 1980-1996' released today by Vice President Hamid Ansari.
"A counter argument to this (which I have mentioned earlier), that it is the Centre which has a nation-wide vision and the capacity to consider the interest of the country as a whole. The debate will continue," the President said.