
Published: July 11, 2025
The Supreme Court’s Constitutional Bench recently delivered its long-awaited verdict on the legality of appointments to constitutional bodies made via ordinance during Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli’s tenure. The case concerned 52 appointments made in 2020 and 2021 without parliamentary hearings.
Instead of clarifying constitutional thresholds, such as the urgency test under Article 114 (ordinance powers) or the parliamentary hearing requirement under Article 292, the Bench leaned on technical reasoning (meeting timing and notice).
For many observers, this was a missed opportunity to strengthen:
For those engaged in governance, compliance, or litigation:
The July 2025 ruling illustrates both the power and limits of Nepal’s Constitutional Bench. While the verdict preserved past appointments, it also highlighted the Court’s reluctance to grapple with deeper constitutional principles. For law firms and their clients, the message is clear: constitutional disputes often turn on how rules are applied, not just what the rules are.
This summary is intended for informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. For tailored guidance on constitutional or governance-related litigation, please contact us
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