Governor’s Impartiality: Constitutional Vision vs Reality

Syllabus: Issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure

Background

  • Recent Supreme Court judgments on Governors and the 16th Presidential Reference have revived debates on the constitutional role of Governors.
  • Constituent Assembly debates show that the framers deliberated deeply on Governor impartiality, discretionary powers, and federal balance.
  • Concerns today mirror fears raised in 1947–49 about whether a nominated Governor could act without political bias.

Constituent Assembly Concerns

  • Members feared a nominated Governor would be “remote-controlled” by the Centre and resemble the colonial provincial Governors under the 1935 Act.
  • They insisted that a Governor must remain above suspicion and avoid becoming a replica of the Viceroy’s appointees.

Ambedkar’s Clarifications

  • On Impartiality
      • Ambedkar stressed that a Governor must act solely on ministerial advice and cannot be an agent of the Centre.
      • He described the Governor as a “purely constitutional Governor” meant to facilitate parliamentary government, not rival the elected Cabinet.
  • On Discretionary Powers
      • Discretion is “very limited,” restricted to explicit provisions such as selecting a Chief Minister after elections.
      • Ambedkar rejected claims that discretionary clauses revived the 1935 Act’s override powers.
  • On Bill Assent and Reservation
    • Members criticised the power to reserve Bills as a disguised discretionary authority.
    • Ambedkar clarified that reservation applies only to a narrow class of Bills that threaten the Centre’s constitutional position.
    • He insisted Governors must not sit in judgment over State legislation and must act on advice unless discretion is expressly mentioned.
  • Ambedkar’s Vision of a Non-Interfering Governor
      • He emphasised that Governors have no special emergency powers and remain bound by the Council of Ministers even during crises.
      • He believed the office was so limited and ceremonial that few would want the position.
  • Contemporary Relevance
    • Present controversies show Governors acting contrary to Ambedkar’s expectations, especially in Opposition-ruled States.
    • Court interpretations of “as soon as possible” have allowed delays in assenting to Bills, contradicting constitutional spirit.
    • As former President K.R. Narayanan asked: Has the Constitution failed us, or have we failed it?

Conclusion

  • Misuse of gubernatorial power reflects failures of individuals, not the Constitution.
  • Courts must uphold constitutional morality and prevent actions that distort Ambedkar’s vision of a non-partisan, limited Governor.

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