Context:
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In its response to the 16th Presidential Reference, the Supreme Court of India adjudicated on the scope of powers of Governors and the President concerning State legislation.
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The ruling has sparked serious concerns over erosion of federalism, as it grants Governors wide discretion to delay or block State Bills, with minimal constitutional or judicial checks.
Key Highlights:
Judicial Ruling on State Bills
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The Supreme Court held that courts cannot impose fixed timelines on Governors for granting assent to State Bills.
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Rejected the doctrine of “deemed assent”, even when Governors indefinitely delay decisions.
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Even if a Bill is re-passed by the State Assembly, the Governor can still reserve it for Presidential consideration.
Departure from Earlier Judicial Position
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The ruling contradicts the April 2025 judgment, which had prescribed a three-month timeline for Governors to act on Bills.
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Weakens consistency and predictability in constitutional interpretation.
Expanded Gubernatorial Discretion
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Governors can now stall legislation without explicit accountability.
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No guidance provided on when a Bill should be reserved for the President, enabling prolonged uncertainty.
Relevant Prelims Points:
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Issue: Dilution of States’ legislative authority under the Constitution.
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Key Constitutional Provisions:
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Article 200: Governor’s assent, withholding, or reservation of State Bills
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Article 201: President’s consideration of reserved Bills
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Article 142: Supreme Court’s power to do complete justice
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Key Bodies:
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Supreme Court of India
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Governor & President
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Impact:
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Governors gain disproportionate influence over State legislation
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Relevant Mains Points:
Constitutional & Federalism Concerns
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The Court relied on separation of powers, but in effect tilted the balance in favour of Governors, who are Union-appointed authorities.
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Articles 200 and 201 use the phrase “as soon as possible”, implying urgency—yet the Court declined to interpret this as imposing timelines.
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Constitutional framers deliberately removed the phrase “in his discretion” from Articles 200 and 201 to limit arbitrary gubernatorial action.
Commission Recommendations Ignored
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The Sarkaria Commission recommended a six-month outer limit for Governors to act on Bills.
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The judgment does not acknowledge or operationalise this guidance.
Impact on States & Democracy
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Enables indefinite delays, even on subjects exclusively under the State List.
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Leaves States with limited remedies against arbitrary gubernatorial inaction.
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Risks converting Governors into political gatekeepers, undermining democratic mandates of elected State legislatures.
Social Justice & Governance Angle
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Delayed legislation disproportionately affects welfare laws, social justice measures, and rights-based State initiatives.
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Centralisation through Governors weakens cooperative federalism.
Way Forward:
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Constitutional conventions must be codified through legislation or judicial clarification.
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Parliament should consider amending Articles 200 and 201 to introduce reasonable timelines.
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Supreme Court should evolve principles of constitutional morality and federal balance in future cases.
UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
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GS 2: Polity, Federalism, Governor’s Role, Constitutional Governance
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GS 2: Social Justice, Democratic Accountability
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Prelims: Articles 200, 201, 142, Sarkaria Commission
