The Constitution (121st amendment) Bill, passed by Parliament in August this year has received President's assent, official sources said.
Before the task of selecting and transferring Supreme Court and High Court judges finally shifts from the collegium, to a committee headed by the Chief Justice of India, government has to get the President's assent to the National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC) Bill, an enabling legislation.
The government has has to notify the date from which the the law will come into force.
The Constitutional Amendment Bill grants constitutional status to the composition of the proposed Commission. It was done following demands by jurists and judges who felt that without a constitutional status, the composition could be altered by a future government by an ordinary legislation.
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The government is likely to send the NJAC Bill to the President for his assent in the coming days. Law Minister D V Sadananda Gowda said that he will meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday to discuss the next course of action.
The Law Ministry had sent the Constitutional Amendment Bill to President for his assent receiving ratification by 17 out of 29 state legislatures. A Constitutional Amendment Bill requires ratification by at least 50 per cent of the states.