"It is a very important issue. We would like to examine it," a bench of justices Altamas Kabir and J Chelemeshwar told senior counsel Fali Nariman, who appeared for petitioner Lily Thomas, an advocate.
The apex court had earlier issued notice to the Attorney General on the petition, filed originally in 2005.
The petitioner has sought striking down sections 8, 9 and 11-A of the RPA, 1951 saying they were violative of articles 84, 173 and 326 of the Constitution which expressly put a bar on criminals getting registered as voters or become MPs/MLAs.
Sections 8, 9 and 11-A of the RPA allows convicts to continue as legislators pending their appeals/revision. It also permits such persons to be registered as voters and be candidates for elections after 6 years of conviction/release from jail.
"That in the absence of any provision in Article 326 or elsewhere in the Constitution diluting or relaxing the said disqualification by efflux of time or in any other manner, the bar based on the said disqualification is total and absolute and operates without reprieve," the petition said. (More)