Corruption Erodes Public Faith in Judiciary; Swift, Transparent Action Can Rebuild Trust: Chief Justice BR Gavai
Bar  and  Bench 04 June 2025
Chief Justice of India (CJI) BR Gavai said on Tuesday that incidents of corruption and misconduct can erode public faith in the judiciary.
 
He said that such instances have surfaced in the Indian judiciary, and the path to rebuilding trust in the system lies in swift, decisive and transparent action. 
 
“In India, when such instances have come to light, the Supreme Court has consistently taken immediate and appropriate measures to address the misconduct,” he said. 
 
The comments come in the backdrop of reports that the Central government may initiate impeachment proceedings against Justice Yashwant Varma, who has been accused of corruption. 
 
CJI Gavai stressed the importance of an independent judiciary and said that while there may be criticisms of the Collegium system, the solution must not come at the cost of judicial independence. 
 
“Judges must be free from external control,” he underscored.
 
The CJI was speaking at the UK Supreme Court on the topic of ‘Maintaining Judicial Legitimacy and Public Confidence’. He also spoke against judges taking post-retirement jobs with the government or resigning from their posts to contest elections. 
 
“A judge contesting an election for a political office can lead to doubts regarding the independence and impartiality of the judiciary, as it may be seen as a conflict of interest or as an attempt to gain favour with the government. The timing and nature of such post-retirement engagements could undermine the public’s trust in the judiciary’s integrity, as it could create a perception that judicial decisions were influenced by the prospect of future government appointments or political involvement.”
 
Therefore, to preserve the credibility and independence of the judiciary, he and many of his colleagues have pledged not to accept any post-retirement roles or positions from the government, he added.
 
Comments
parimalshah1
11 months ago
We are still waiting for the final order on Waqf after the cronies of Pindi-alliance opposed the amendments in the SC and order is kept is reserve. It is public knowledge that the same court asked opposition for the same Waqf in 1995 to go to the high court. So, the final order will decide whether remaining faith is intact or even that is lost in favor of land mafias. It will tell citizens that rich and powerful are more equal than law abiding common man.
dsrisub
11 months ago
Yes when people know politicians are corrupt taking up their cases for urgent hearing by SC and that too suspending sentence etc definitely doesn't go well. If you pay a high profile lawyer you can win itself erodes trust
vaibhavdhoka
11 months ago
Judiciary has long back lost public faith,it has become used to corruption and delay.No use of complaint to Judiciary, there is absolutely no action on complaints. Showing worry has become stage management.
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