We went through the constitution bench decisions from 2010 to the present day (filtered on the Supreme Court website) and found that the CJI was in the dissenting minority only thrice in that period!
On the lack of agreement between the bench on key issues like recognising civil unions, CJI Chandrachud said, “Three of my colleagues recognised the right but said that we cannot elevate this to a constitutional right.
On the lack of agreement between the bench on key issues like recognising civil unions, CJI Chandrachud said, “Three of my colleagues recognised the right but said that we cannot elevate this to a constitutional right.
The statement from the Chief Justice of India comes in the backdrop of recent social media clamour about the orders of the unelected judiciary and how far can it be implemented
On October 17, a five-judge Constitution bench headed by the CJI unanimously refused to accord legal recognition to same-sex marriage, saying there was "no unqualified right" to marriage.