Constitution (One Hundred and Thirtieth Amendment) Bill, 2025 

Why in News: The 130th Constitution Amendment Bill, 2025 mandates resignation or removal of Ministers, CMs, and the PM if in custody for 30+ days in serious cases. It aims to curb criminalisation in politics but raises concerns over presumption of innocence, political misuse, and governance instability.

Context and Purpose

  • Introduced in Lok Sabha on August 20, 2025.
  • Addresses criminalisation of politics and attempts to ensure moral integrity in governance.
  • Provision: Ministers, Chief Ministers, Prime Minister must resign or be automatically removed if kept in custody for 30 consecutive days for offences carrying a maximum punishment of five years or more.
  • Aim: Clean politics and prevent leaders in custody from holding office, thereby restoring public trust.

Constitutional Basis

  • Draws on Articles 75, 164, and 239AA – govern tenure of Union, State, and Delhi Ministers.
  • Traditionally: Ministers hold office at pleasure of the President/Governor.
  • Judicial interpretation places limits on this discretion – must conform to constitutional morality and propriety.

Judicial Precedents

  • S.R. Bommai vs Union of India – stressed constitutional morality, integrity, accountability in governance.
  • Manoj Narula vs Union of India – warned against appointment of persons with serious criminal charges as Ministers; ethics are part of constitutional framework.
  • Lily Thomas vs Union of India – lawmakers disqualified upon conviction; struck down 3-month appeal grace period under Representation of People Act.

Scale of the Problem: Criminalisation in Politics

Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR) data:

  • 2024 General Election: 46% MPs had declared criminal cases.
  • 2019: 43%; 2014: 34%; 2009: 30%.
  • 55% increase in 15 years.
  • Shows deepening crisis of political criminality, which the Bill seeks to address.

Strength of the Bill

1. Addresses criminalisation of politics – sends a strong signal against corrupt leaders continuing in power while in custody.

2. Codifies judicial concerns – gives legislative backing to Supreme Court observations in cases like Manoj Narula and S.R. Bommai on the need for integrity in public office.

3. Restores public trust – reassures citizens that governance will not be run by leaders under prolonged detention.

4. Raises accountability standards – holds Ministers to stricter ethical norms compared to legislators, setting a higher bar for executive responsibility.

5. Timely intervention – responds to the growing trend of MPs/MLAs with criminal cases (46% of MPs in 2024), making it a relevant and urgent reform.

Concerns and Challenges

1. Presumption of Innocence

  • Article 21 guarantees right to life and liberty.
  • Bill equates arrest/detention with grounds for removal – even before conviction or framing of charges.
  • Violates the principle of innocence until proven guilty.

2. Conflict with Representation of the People Act

  • RPA, 1951 disqualifies legislators only upon conviction.
  • Creates inconsistency: Legislator continues until conviction, but Minister resigns on mere detention.
  • Produces asymmetry in constitutional treatment of public officials.

3. Politicisation and Executive Discretion

  • Bill inserts:
    • Clause 5A after Article 75(5),
    • Clause 4A after Article 164(4),
    • Clause 5A after Article 239AA(5).
  • Ministers removable on advice of PM/CM or automatically after 30 days.
  • Allows political manoeuvring:
    • The PM may shield allies for 30 days.
    • Hostile CM may exploit rule to oust rivals.
  • Risks embedding partisanship into accountability.

4. Instability and “Revolving Door” Problem

  • Ministers can be reappointed once released from custody.
  • Creates cycles of resignation and reinstatement depending on bail/court orders.
  • Results in governance instability and potential for legal tactics as political weapons.

5. Over-broad Scope

  • Applies to all offences with punishment of 5+ years, including relatively minor offences.
  • Not restricted to moral turpitude/corruption-related crimes.
  • May deter capable individuals from accepting ministerial office due to harsh consequences of mere detention.

Alternative Approaches – A More Nuanced Model

  • Link removal to judicial milestones: e.g., framing of charges by a competent court instead of mere arrest.
  • Independent review mechanism: Tribunal or judicial panel to prevent misuse and ensure impartiality.
  • Interim suspension: Ministers suspended from office during trial instead of outright removal.
  • Limit scope: Restrict to cases of moral turpitude, corruption, serious offences – not all crimes with 5+ year punishment.

Conclusion

The Bill is a bold step against criminalisation in politics, but without safeguards it risks undermining fairness, due process, and stability; a balanced, nuanced approach is needed.

GS Paper II (Polity & Governance):

  • Constitutional provisions regarding Ministers (Articles 75, 164, 239AA).
  • Separation of powers and checks and balances.
  • Issues of criminalisation of politics and electoral reforms.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top