After its review plea on Maratha reservation was denied yesterday, Maharashtra chief minister Eknath Shinde on Friday stated that the state government will file a curative petition in the Supreme Court. "The Maharashtra government is determined to serve justice to the Maratha community," CM Shinde said. The Supreme Court dismissed a review petition filed by the Maharashtra Government (then the MVA Government on June 23, 2021) challenging the May 5, 2021 judgement that declared a law that provides reservation benefits to the Maratha community taking the quota limit in the State in excess of 50% unconstitutional, news agency ANI reported.






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The court, led by Justice Ashok Bhushan, determined that there were no "exceptional circumstances" or "extraordinary situation" in Maharashtra that prompted the Maharashtra government to exceed the 50% ceiling limit in order to provide quota advantages to the Maratha people.


The cancelled quota provided the Maratha community with 12% and 13% reservation in education and employment, respectively, exceeding the Supreme Court's former restriction of 50%.


According to the Supreme Court, the 50% reservation ceiling was established in the Indra Sawhney judgement by a nine-judge panel.


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The bench further concluded that only exceptional circumstances would warrant granting reservation in excess of the 50% limit. In its petition, the state cites many reasons for requesting that the case be heard again by the five-judge panel. It claims that the federal government's reserve for the economically weaker portion (EWS) violates the 50% threshold in numerous states.


(With Inputs From ANI)