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(This piece has been re-published from The Quint’s archives on the occasion of Republic Day. The piece was first published on 26.11.17)
India has never seriously evaluated the performance of its Constitution. Of the four official reviews in the 67 years since its adoption, the first three were actually attempts to get around the original Constitution. The changes they caused only weakened the document.
The last reassessment, by the National Commission to Review the Working of the Constitution (NCRWC), was marred by politics from its inception. The Commission produced scathing reviews and far reaching recommendations, but its report was simply shelved.
Our Constitution was not meant to be sacred. “I may point out the Constitution which we frame is not an end by itself,” Nehru said in the opening days of the Constituent Assembly, “but it would be only the basis for further work.”
Patel declared categorically:
The irony is that India has modified the original Constitution more than a hundred times. Some changes have made it all but unrecognisable. But we resist its full scale reevaluation.
Piecemeal reviews started within the first year of the Constitution’s inauguration. In 1951, Prime Minister Nehru chaired a Cabinet Committee on the Constitution to find a way around the courts’ rejection of his government’s zamindari abolition program.
He wrote to the chief ministers that the judiciary’s role was unchallengeable:
The result was the First Amendment, which not only set a wrong precedent, but it created a new Schedule in the Constitution to shield future laws from judicial review. SP Mookerjee quipped in Parliament that the Constitution was being treated as “a scrap of paper.”
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A second, similarly harmful revision wasn’t far behind. In 1954, the Congress Working Committee set up a subcommittee under Nehru’s chairmanship to examine the document. This time it was a political party trying to bar courts from questioning its government’s compensation for acquiring private property.
Pitching the Fourth Amendment to Parliament, Nehru said it was “to remove the contradictions and make the Fundamental Rights subserve[sic] the Directive Principles of State Policy.”
Home Minister GB Pant observed:
The third reassessment was comprehensive, and hugely detrimental. In 1976, Indira Gandhi formed a party committee, under the chairmanship of Swaran Singh, to suggest amendments to the Constitution.
Gandhi really wanted to assess the acceptability of an utterly centralised system proposed by some Congress insiders in a pamphlet called ‘A Fresh Look at Our Constitution’.
Singh’s recommendations resulted in the notorious 42nd Amendment, which concentrated powers in the hands of the Prime Minister. The President was denied any discretionary powers, and the judiciary’s authority to review was severely curtailed. Granville Austin, famous chronicler of India’s Constitution, wrote:
This ad hoc approach to changing our Constitution has only made India’s problems worse. One example is the anti-defection amendments passed in the 1980s. They reduced our legislators to puppets of party bosses, degrading the primary purpose of Parliament.
The first full and transparent effort to reform was in 2000, by the National Commission to Review the Working of the Constitution (NCRWC). Appointed by the Vajpayee government, under the chairmanship of ex-Chief Justice MN Venkatachaliah, it was a part of NDA’s election manifesto.
NDA leaders had been advocating wholesale constitutional reforms for some time. Vajpayee had noted in a 1998 speech:
Opposition parties raised a hue and cry about the appointment of the Commission. They said the government had a “hidden agenda” to scrap the Ambedkar Constitution, end parliamentary democracy, abandon secularism, drop reservations, and so on. Home Minister L.K. Advani categorically denied dropping secularism or reservations, in a long article entitled ‘Why We Need to Change Our Constitution’.
On the issue of the parliamentary versus the presidential system, he argued that “the basic structure doctrine does not bind us to parliamentary democracy.” But opposition continued.
The Vajpayee government was compelled to limit the scope of the Commission. In its terms of reference, it was restricted to work “within the framework of parliamentary democracy,” and to recommend changes to the Constitution “without interfering with its basic structure or features.”
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The NCRWC’s report, however, was scathing:
The Commission concluded:
On the parliamentary system’s basic premise that it provides greater accountability at the expense of stability in governments, the Commission argued that it should be reconsidered. It noted that in today’s context, “a reasonable degree of stability” and “strong governance” are both important. Justice Venkatachaliah would later write that he was “veering around” to the view that India should adopt the presidential form of government.
The Commission made 250 recommendations, but its report was never placed before Parliament.
With inputs from: Debates, 22 January 1947; Debates, 29 April 1947; Working a Democratic Constitution by Granville Austin; presidentialsystem.org, Constitution Making Since 1950 by Dr. Subhash Kashyap
(The author is Founder and CEO of the Divya Himachal group and author of ‘Why India Needs the Presidential System’. He can be reached @BhanuDhamija .This is a personal blog and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
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