Daily Current Affairs for UPSC : 30 Oct 2025/130th Constitutional Amendment Bill

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October 30, 2025

Daily Current Affairs for UPSC : 30 Oct 2025/130th Constitutional Amendment Bill

Context

  • The Central Government introduced the 130th Constitutional Amendment Bill to amend Articles 75, 164, and 239AA related to the Union Council of Ministers, State Councils of Ministers, and Delhi’s administration.
  • Referred to a Joint Parliamentary Committee for scrutiny.

Key Provisions

Automatic Removal of Ministers:

  • A Minister (Union/State/Delhi) arrested and detained for 30 consecutive days for an offence punishable with imprisonment up to 5 years or more shall:
      • Be removed by the President/Governor on advice of PM/CM by 31st day, or
      • Cease to hold office automatically if advice not given.

Prime Minister/Chief Minister:

    • Must resign by 31st day of custody, else cease to hold office automatically.

Rationale

  • Seeks to uphold constitutional morality, accountability, and public trust.
  • Aims to prevent Ministers with serious criminal charges from continuing in office.

Contentious Issues

Discretionary Power of Arrest:

  • Arrest under BNSS/CrPC Section 41 is discretionary, not mandatory.
  • Potential for political misuse—arrest can be engineered to unseat Ministers.
  • Courts (Joginder Kumar 1994, Arnesh Kumar 2014) emphasised need for justification before arrest.

Detention and Bail Concerns:

  • Disqualification triggered by 30 days custody is irrational as default bail arises after 60–90 days (CrPC S.167(2)/BNSS S.187).
  • Bail rejection often influenced by seriousness of offence, not just legal grounds.
  • Special laws (PMLA, NDPS, UAPA) have stringent twin bail conditions, increasing risk of prolonged detention.

Impact on Political Fairness:

  • High possibility of selective targeting of opposition leaders.
  • Judicial discretion and delay in bail decisions may indirectly cause political disqualification.

Administrative Dilemma:

    • A Minister may face Hobson’s choice — resign to secure bail or stay and risk disqualification.
    • Creates uncertainty and instability in governance.

Related Case Laws:

Case Key Observation
Deenan vs Jayalalitha (1989) ‘May arrest’ – discretionary.
Joginder Kumar (1994) Arrest needs justification.
Amarawati (2004) Not mandatory to arrest in cognisable offence.
Arnesh Kumar (2014) Record reasons for arrest <7 yrs.
Satender Antil (2022) Mandatory compliance S.41/41A.

Legal & Constitutional Challenges

  • May violate Article 21 (Right to Liberty) due to arbitrary consequences of detention.
  • Conflicts with presumption of innocence until conviction.
  • Raises federalism concerns, as arrest mechanisms differ across states.

Steps to Consider

  • Clear definition of “detention” and “arrest” to avoid ambiguity.
  • Provide judicial oversight or review mechanism before disqualification.
  • Consider longer threshold (60–90 days) aligned with default bail provisions.
  • Strengthen protections against politically motivated arrests.

Way Forward:

  • Ensure balance between probity in public life and protection from political vendetta.
  • Implement transparent arrest protocols as per Arnesh Kumar guidelines.
  • Reform special statutes (PMLA, UAPA, NDPS) to harmonize bail norms.
  • Encourage independent policing and judicial accountability to prevent misuse.

Conclusion:

While the intent of the 130th Amendment Bill — ensuring integrity in governance — is commendable, its operational framework risks political misuse.
A more balanced approach, aligning with principles of natural justice and constitutional morality, is essential to safeguard both democratic accountability and personal liberty


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