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Amendments and the Basic Structure

Art 368, the three methods of amendment, the basic structure doctrine and its line of cases (Shankari Prasad to I R Coelho), and the landmark amendments from the 1st to the 106th

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At a glance
PaperPaper ISubjectPolitySyllabusThe country's political system and Constitution of India, social systems and public administration, and regional and international security issues and human rights including its indicatorsImportanceHigh
Article 368Basic StructureKesavananda Bharati42nd Amendment44th AmendmentAmendmentsMinerva MillsGolak Nath

Why this matters for CAPF

Amendments and the basic structure are a reliable two-part scorer for CAPF. One part is pure static recall (which amendment did what, and the three amendment procedures), and the other is the doctrinal line of cases that runs from Shankari Prasad (1951) through Golak Nath (1967) to Kesavananda Bharati (1973) and Minerva Mills (1980). The examiner asks which case laid down the basic structure, which Article governs amendments, what the 42nd and 44th Amendments did, and which amendment created which institution. The 44th Amendment is also the central human-rights amendment, which links this topic to the security limb of the syllabus. This note gives the three-method procedure table, the full case line, and the landmark-amendments table that the objective test rewards. The standard reference is NCERT Class XI "Indian Constitution at Work" and Laxmikanth's chapters on amendment of the Constitution and the basic structure doctrine.

The amendment procedure (Art 368, Part XX)

The Constitution can be amended under Art 368 in Part XX. There are three methods. CAPF examiners test which kind of provision needs which method.

Method What it needs Examples of subjects
By a simple majority (outside Art 368) A majority of the members present and voting in each House Admission and creation of new States; alteration of State boundaries, areas and names; abolition or creation of legislative councils; citizenship; salaries and allowances; quorum; rules of procedure
By a special majority (under Art 368) A majority of the total membership of each House plus a majority of not less than two-thirds of the members of that House present and voting Fundamental Rights, Directive Principles, and most other provisions of the Constitution
By a special majority plus ratification by the States A special majority as above, plus ratification by the legislatures of at least half of the States by a simple majority Federal provisions: the election of the President; the extent of the executive power of the Union and the States; the Supreme Court and the High Courts; the distribution of legislative powers; the Seventh Schedule; the representation of States in Parliament; Art 368 itself

An amendment bill can be introduced in either House of Parliament (and by a private member, not only a minister); it does not need the prior recommendation of the President. It must be passed by each House separately (there is no provision for a joint sitting to resolve a deadlock on an amendment bill). After the 24th Amendment, 1971, the President is bound to give assent to a duly passed amendment bill. Only Parliament can initiate the amendment; the States cannot (except that a State legislature may pass a resolution requesting the creation or abolition of a legislative council).

The basic structure doctrine (the case line)

Case Year Holding
Shankari Prasad 1951 A constitutional amendment is not "law" within the meaning of Art 13, so Parliament can amend any part, including the Fundamental Rights
Sajjan Singh 1965 Reaffirmed Shankari Prasad: the amending power extends to the Fundamental Rights
Golak Nath 1967 Reversed the earlier view: an amendment is "law" under Art 13, so Parliament cannot amend or abridge the Fundamental Rights
24th Amendment 1971 Parliament's reply: affirmed the power to amend any part of the Constitution, including Part III, and made the President's assent compulsory
Kesavananda Bharati 1973 The foundational ruling: Parliament can amend any part of the Constitution but cannot destroy or alter its "basic structure"
Indira Nehru Gandhi v Raj Narain 1975 First application of the doctrine to strike down a constitutional amendment (the 39th Amendment provision shielding the Prime Minister's election)
Minerva Mills 1980 Struck down parts of the 42nd Amendment; held that the limited amending power, and the harmony between Part III and Part IV, are part of the basic structure
Waman Rao 1981 Ninth Schedule laws added after 1973-04-24 (the date of the Kesavananda judgment) are open to basic-structure review
I R Coelho 2007 Confirmed Waman Rao: even Ninth Schedule laws can be tested against the basic structure if they damage it

Kesavananda Bharati v State of Kerala (1973) was decided by a 13-judge bench, the largest in the Court's history, by a 7 to 6 majority. The basic structure doctrine has never been reversed.

Elements held to be part of the basic structure (illustrative)

The list is illustrative, not exhaustive; the Court has added to it case by case. Elements recognised so far include: the supremacy of the Constitution; the rule of law; the principle of separation of powers; judicial review; federalism; secularism; the sovereign, democratic and republican character of the polity; free and fair elections; the independence of the judiciary; the powers of the Supreme Court under Art 32 and the High Courts under Art 226; the harmony and balance between Fundamental Rights and Directive Principles; and the limited nature of the amending power itself. Provisions such as Art 31C (which protected laws giving effect to certain DPSP) and the 99th Amendment creating the National Judicial Appointments Commission (struck down in 2015) show the doctrine operating in practice: the NJAC was held to violate the independence of the judiciary, a basic feature.

Nature and limits of the amending power

The amending power under Art 368 is a constituent power, distinct from ordinary legislative power, which is why an amendment is passed by a special procedure and not as an ordinary bill. Several points recur in objective questions.

  • An amendment bill does not require the prior recommendation of the President to be introduced (unlike a money bill).
  • There is no joint sitting of the two Houses to resolve a disagreement over an amendment bill; each House must pass it separately by the required majority.
  • The required majority must be satisfied at every stage, including the third reading.
  • After the 24th Amendment, 1971, the President has no discretion and must assent.
  • The 42nd Amendment had tried to make the amending power unlimited and to bar judicial review of amendments; Minerva Mills (1980) struck this down, holding that a limited amending power is itself part of the basic structure.
  • Many provisions of the Constitution can be changed by Parliament by an ordinary law (a simple majority) without invoking Art 368 at all, for example admitting or creating new States (Art 2 and 3), changing State names and boundaries, and altering the citizenship law.

The 42nd versus the 44th Amendment (the central contrast)

CAPF returns again and again to these two amendments because the 44th was largely a reaction to the 42nd. Hold the contrast as a paired table.

Theme 42nd Amendment, 1976 44th Amendment, 1978
Popular name The "Mini-Constitution" The "rights-restoring" amendment
Preamble Added Socialist, Secular, Integrity No change to the Preamble
Term of the lower House Extended Lok Sabha and Assemblies to 6 years Restored to 5 years
Ground for a National Emergency "Internal disturbance" (unchanged then) Substituted "armed rebellion" for "internal disturbance"
Cabinet advice for emergency No written-advice requirement Required written advice of the Cabinet
Art 20 and Art 21 in an emergency Could be affected Made non-suspendable
Right to property Still in Part III Removed from Part III to Art 300A
Judicial review of amendments Sought to bar it The bar fell with Minerva Mills (1980)
Fundamental Duties Added Part IVA (Art 51A) Retained

Landmark amendments (high-yield)

Amendment Year What it did
1st 1951 Added the Ninth Schedule; added reasonable restrictions to free speech under Art 19; enabled special provisions for socially and educationally backward classes
7th 1956 Reorganised the States on a linguistic basis after the States Reorganisation Act, 1956; the four-fold classification of States was abolished
24th 1971 Affirmed Parliament's power to amend any part of the Constitution; made the President's assent to an amendment bill compulsory
26th 1971 Abolished the privy purses and the privileges of the former rulers of princely States
42nd 1976 The "Mini-Constitution": added Socialist, Secular and Integrity to the Preamble; added the Fundamental Duties (Art 51A); added Art 39A, 43A and 48A; gave certain DPSP primacy over rights (later read down); extended the Lok Sabha and Assembly term to 6 years (later reversed); curtailed judicial review
44th 1978 Reversed many 42nd Amendment changes; restored the Lok Sabha term to 5 years; substituted "armed rebellion" for "internal disturbance" in Art 352; made Art 20 and Art 21 non-suspendable in an emergency; required written Cabinet advice for a National Emergency; removed the right to property from Part III and made it a legal right under Art 300A
52nd 1985 Anti-defection law; added the Tenth Schedule
61st 1988 Reduced the voting age from 21 to 18
73rd 1992 Constitutionalised Panchayati Raj; added Part IX and the Eleventh Schedule
74th 1992 Constitutionalised urban local bodies; added Part IXA and the Twelfth Schedule
86th 2002 Right to education (Art 21A); the Fundamental Duty under Art 51A(k); recast Art 45
91st 2003 Capped the Council of Ministers at 15 per cent of the House strength; strengthened the anti-defection law
97th 2011 Made forming cooperative societies a Fundamental Right under Art 19(1)(c); added Art 43B and Part IXB
101st 2016 Introduced the Goods and Services Tax (GST); created the GST Council (Art 279A)
102nd 2018 Gave the National Commission for Backward Classes constitutional status (Art 338B)
103rd 2019 10 per cent reservation for the Economically Weaker Sections (EWS) in education and public employment
104th 2019 Extended the reservation of seats for SCs and STs in legislatures; ended the nomination of Anglo-Indians
106th 2023 Women's reservation, one-third of the seats in the Lok Sabha and the State Legislative Assemblies (the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam)

Security and human-rights angle

  • The 44th Amendment, 1978 is the central human-rights amendment. It ensured that Art 20 and Art 21 cannot be suspended even during a National Emergency, narrowed the ground for a National Emergency from "internal disturbance" to "armed rebellion" (Art 352), required written Cabinet advice for the proclamation, and removed the immunity of the emergency proclamation from judicial review. These were a direct response to the 1975 to 1977 Emergency and the ADM Jabalpur ruling (1976). See citizenship and emergency provisions and fundamental rights.
  • The basic structure doctrine itself protects free and fair elections, the rule of law, secularism and judicial review, the structural guarantees against an authoritarian misuse of State power.
  • The 103rd Amendment (EWS reservation) and the reservation-extension amendments connect to the social-justice limb of the syllabus, and the 106th Amendment (women's reservation) connects to the representation-and-rights dimension.

How CAPF asks it

  • Single-correct: which case laid down the basic structure (Kesavananda Bharati, 1973); which Article governs amendments (Art 368).
  • Matching: amendment to its effect (42nd Preamble words and duties, 44th right to property, 61st voting age, 73rd panchayats, 101st GST).
  • How-many-statements-correct: a cluster on the amendment procedure (either House, no joint sitting, President bound to assent).
  • Assertion-reason: a constitutional amendment can be struck down because the basic structure cannot be destroyed.

Authored practice

  1. The basic structure doctrine was laid down in which case. (a) Golak Nath (b) Kesavananda Bharati (c) Minerva Mills (d) Shankari Prasad. Answer (b). Kesavananda Bharati v State of Kerala (1973) held that Parliament can amend any part but cannot destroy the basic structure.

  2. Consider the following about the amendment procedure under Art 368. (1) An amendment bill can be introduced in either House. (2) There is a provision for a joint sitting if the two Houses disagree. (3) Federal provisions need ratification by half the States. How many are correct. (a) one (b) two (c) three (d) none. Answer (b). Statements 1 and 3 are correct; there is no joint sitting for an amendment bill.

  3. Match the amendment with its effect. (1) 44th (2) 61st (3) 73rd (4) 101st, with effects: voting age 18, GST, right to property to Art 300A, Panchayati Raj. Answer 1-right to property to Art 300A, 2-voting age 18, 3-Panchayati Raj, 4-GST.

  4. Which amendment is called the "Mini-Constitution". (a) 1st (b) 42nd (c) 44th (d) 24th. Answer (b). The 42nd Amendment, 1976 made sweeping changes, including the Preamble words and the Fundamental Duties.

  5. Which case opened even Ninth Schedule laws to review against the basic structure. (a) Indira Gandhi v Raj Narain (b) Minerva Mills (c) I R Coelho (d) Golak Nath. Answer (c). I R Coelho (2007) confirmed that Ninth Schedule laws added after 1973-04-24 can be tested against the basic structure.

Common confusion

Often mixed up The correct position
Golak Nath vs Kesavananda Golak Nath (1967) barred amending rights; Kesavananda (1973) allowed amending any part within basic-structure limits
Which provisions need State ratification Only the federal provisions; most amendments need only a special majority
42nd vs 44th Amendment 42nd was the sweeping "Mini-Constitution"; 44th reversed much of it and added the rights safeguards
Joint sitting for amendments There is no joint sitting for a constitutional amendment bill
24th vs 25th Amendment 24th affirmed the amending power and made assent compulsory; 25th curtailed the right to property and added Art 31C
Right to property amendment Removed from Part III by the 44th Amendment (not the 42nd) and placed in Art 300A

Memory hook

  • Case line: "Shankari, Sajjan, Golak, Kesava, Minerva, Coelho," the spine of the doctrine in order.
  • 42nd vs 44th: "42 added, 44 amended back." The 42nd was the maximalist amendment; the 44th was the restoration.
  • Federal-provision ratification: "half the States must say yes."
  • Local government amendments: "73 for villages, 74 for cities," both in 1992.

Night before

  • Art 368 (Part XX); three methods: simple majority, special majority, and special majority plus ratification by half the States.
  • An amendment bill starts in either House, passes each separately, with no joint sitting; the President must assent (24th Amendment, 1971).
  • Kesavananda Bharati (1973): Parliament can amend any part but cannot destroy the basic structure (13 judges, 7 to 6).
  • Golak Nath (1967) barred amending Fundamental Rights; the 24th Amendment (1971) reversed it.
  • 42nd Amendment (1976), the "Mini-Constitution": Preamble words, Fundamental Duties, DPSP primacy (later read down).
  • 44th Amendment (1978): right to property to Art 300A; Art 20 and Art 21 protected in an emergency; "armed rebellion" in Art 352.
  • Minerva Mills (1980) struck down parts of the 42nd Amendment; I R Coelho (2007) opened the Ninth Schedule to review.

One-line recall

  • The Constitution is amended under Art 368, in Part XX.
  • There are three methods: simple majority, special majority, and special majority plus State ratification.
  • Federal provisions need ratification by at least half the States.
  • An amendment bill can be introduced in either House, by a minister or a private member.
  • There is no joint sitting for a constitutional amendment bill.
  • The President must give assent to an amendment bill (24th Amendment, 1971).
  • Shankari Prasad (1951): an amendment is not "law"; rights can be amended.
  • Golak Nath (1967): rights cannot be amended.
  • Kesavananda Bharati (1973): the basic structure cannot be destroyed.
  • Indira Gandhi v Raj Narain (1975): first amendment struck down on the doctrine.
  • Minerva Mills (1980): the Part III-Part IV balance and the limited amending power are basic structure.
  • I R Coelho (2007): Ninth Schedule laws are open to basic-structure review.
  • Basic structure includes judicial review, federalism, secularism, free and fair elections and the rule of law.
  • The 1st Amendment (1951) added the Ninth Schedule.
  • The 42nd Amendment (1976) is the "Mini-Constitution".
  • The 44th Amendment (1978) is the central rights-protecting amendment.
  • The 61st Amendment (1988) cut the voting age to 18; the 73rd and 74th (1992) created local government.
  • The 101st (2016) introduced GST; the 103rd (2019) introduced EWS reservation; the 106th (2023) introduced women's reservation.

Glossary

  • Art 368: the provision in Part XX governing amendment of the Constitution.
  • Simple majority: a majority of members present and voting.
  • Special majority: a majority of the total membership plus two-thirds of those present and voting.
  • State ratification: approval by at least half the State legislatures, needed for federal provisions.
  • Basic structure: the core features of the Constitution that an amendment cannot destroy.
  • Judicial review: the power of courts to test the validity of laws and amendments.
  • Mini-Constitution: the popular name for the wide-ranging 42nd Amendment, 1976.
  • Ninth Schedule: the list of laws given protection from judicial review.
  • Privy purse: the payment to former rulers of princely States, abolished by the 26th Amendment.
  • Anti-defection law: the rule disqualifying legislators for defection, in the Tenth Schedule.
  • EWS: the Economically Weaker Sections, given 10 per cent reservation by the 103rd Amendment.
  • GST Council: the body created by the 101st Amendment under Art 279A.
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