President urged not to grant assent to Transgender Amendment Bill
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UPSC Study Note: President Urged Not to Grant Assent to Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill, 2026
1. At a Glance
- The Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill, 2026 was passed by the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha in March 2026 amid allegations of undue haste and lack of stakeholder consultation. [S1]
- ~140 lawyers and women's rights activists wrote to President Droupadi Murmu urging her to withhold assent, citing constitutional violations and procedural infirmities. [S1]
- The controversy revives long-standing tensions between legislative action on transgender rights and the NALSA v. Union of India (2014) Supreme Court framework recognising self-identification as a fundamental right. [S1]
- UPSC relevance: GS-II (governance, rights of vulnerable sections, constitutional provisions); GS-I (social issues); tests knowledge of the 2019 parent Act, NALSA judgment, Articles 14/19/21, and pre-legislative consultation norms.
2. Why in the News
- 26 March 2026: Rajya Sabha passed the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill, 2026; Lok Sabha had passed it earlier the same week. [S1]
- 27 March 2026: All-India Feminist Alliance (ALIFA) and National Alliance for Justice, Accountability and Rights (NAJAR)—together representing ~140 lawyers and activists—wrote to President Murmu urging her to withhold assent. [S1]
- Simultaneously, two members/representatives of the National Council for Transgender Persons resigned in protest immediately after the Rajya Sabha vote. [S1]
- Transgender activists held protests at Jantar Mantar, New Delhi. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 2014 | NALSA v. Union of India — Supreme Court declares right to self-determination of gender a fundamental right under Articles 14 and 19; directs state to recognise a "third gender" and provide reservations/welfare. |
| 2014 | Pre-Legislative Consultation Policy, 2014 issued by Ministry of Law — mandates public/stakeholder consultation before Bills are introduced. |
| 2016 | First Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Bill introduced in Lok Sabha; lapsed. |
| 2019 | Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019 enacted — establishes National Council for Transgender Persons; provides for welfare boards, identity certificates, prohibition of discrimination. |
| 2019–2024 | Community criticism of 2019 Act persists: objections to medical board for gender certification, family-based rehabilitation over community housing, and absence of reservation provisions. |
| 2026 | Government introduces Amendment Bill; both Houses pass it with speed and without public consultation; President urged to withhold assent. [S1] |
4. Core Static Facts
Parent Legislation - Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019 — parent Act being amended. - Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment.
Key Statutory Bodies - National Council for Transgender Persons — constituted under the 2019 Act; chaired by Union Minister of Social Justice; includes secretaries of relevant ministries + transgender representatives.
Constitutional Provisions Invoked - Article 14 — Right to Equality (cited in NALSA; self-identification a fundamental right). - Article 19 — Freedom of expression/identity. - Article 21 — Right to life and personal liberty, including right to dignity and bodily autonomy.
Key Judgment - NALSA v. Union of India (2014) — SC held: (a) gender self-identification is a fundamental right; (b) transgender persons are "third gender"; (c) directed OBC reservations for transgender persons in education/employment.
Key Policy - Pre-Legislative Consultation Policy, 2014 (Ministry of Law & Justice) — mandates minimum 30-day public consultation and uploading draft Bills on ministry websites before introduction.
Organisations Opposing the Bill - ALIFA — All-India Feminist Alliance (pan-India collective of grassroots organisations). - NAJAR — National Alliance for Justice, Accountability and Rights (lawyers' forum).
Key Objection: Medical Board - The Amendment Bill reportedly introduces/retains a medical board requirement for gender recognition — community argues this violates the NALSA principle of self-identification and is a form of gatekeeping. [S1]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- The NALSA (2014) judgment established self-identification as the standard for gender recognition, grounding it in Articles 14, 19, and 21. Any legislative requirement for medical certification/board approval arguably violates this standard. [S1]
- Bypassing the Pre-Legislative Consultation Policy, 2014 raises procedural ultra vires arguments; while the policy is non-statutory, courts have sometimes read consultation requirements into natural justice principles.
- Two National Council members' resignations signal internal delegitimisation of the amendment process itself. [S1]
Social
- Transgender persons remain among India's most marginalised groups — facing discrimination in employment, housing, healthcare, and education.
- Community-led organisations (hijra, kinnara, aravani networks) were reportedly excluded from consultations, violating participatory governance norms. [S1]
- Women's rights groups joining the protest reflects intersectional solidarity — the Amendment Bill is seen as affecting broader gender autonomy principles.
Ethical / Governance
- "Undue and unjustifiable haste" (ALIFA/NAJAR language) in passing both Houses without stakeholder consultation undermines deliberative democracy. [S1]
- The President's role here is largely formal under Article 111 — she may return the Bill once for reconsideration, but if Parliament re-passes it, assent is mandatory. Activists are thus attempting to trigger that reconsideration window.
- National Council members' resignations represent a breakdown in the co-governance model the 2019 Act intended.
Historical
- Post-NALSA, the 2019 Act was itself controversial — community groups preferred the Rights of Transgender Persons Bill (2014, Private Member's Bill by Tiruchi Siva) which had stronger provisions including reservations.
- The 2026 Amendment follows a pattern of legislative rollback after judicial expansion of rights (cf. 2013 Sec. 377 recriminalisation trajectory, later reversed by SC in Navtej Johar, 2018).
Administrative
- National Council for Transgender Persons as a consultative body exists precisely to prevent uninformed law-making; its non-consultation is an institutional bypass.
- States must also operationalise welfare boards under the 2019 Act — an Amendment without state-level consultation adds federal implementation complexity.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- March 2026 (week of 24–26): Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill, 2026 passed by Lok Sabha and then Rajya Sabha. [S1]
- 26 March 2026: Two members/representatives of the National Council for Transgender Persons resign in protest immediately post-Rajya Sabha passage. [S1]
- 27 March 2026: ALIFA + NAJAR write to President Droupadi Murmu — ~140 signatories urging non-assent on grounds of constitutional violations and procedural infirmities. [S1]
- 27 March 2026: Transgender activists protest at Jantar Mantar, New Delhi. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act was enacted in 2019 by the Indian Parliament.
- The implementing ministry for the 2019 Act is the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment.
- In NALSA v. Union of India (2014), the Supreme Court held that self-identification of gender is a fundamental right under Articles 14 and 19 of the Constitution.
- The National Council for Transgender Persons was constituted under the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019.
- The Pre-Legislative Consultation Policy was issued in 2014 by the Ministry of Law and Justice.
- ALIFA stands for All-India Feminist Alliance; NAJAR stands for National Alliance for Justice, Accountability and Rights.
- The organisations that wrote to the President against the 2026 Amendment Bill represent approximately 140 lawyers and women's rights activists. [S1]
- Under Article 111 of the Constitution, the President may return a Bill (other than a Money Bill) to Parliament for reconsideration — but must give assent if Parliament re-passes it.
- The NALSA judgment (2014) also directed the government to treat transgender persons as OBC for purposes of reservation in education and employment.
- The Navtej Singh Johar v. Union of India (2018) judgment decriminalised consensual same-sex relations by reading down Section 377 IPC — a related landmark on LGBTQ+ rights.
- Two members of the National Council for Transgender Persons submitted resignations immediately after the Rajya Sabha passed the 2026 Amendment Bill. [S1]
- Under the Pre-Legislative Consultation Policy, 2014, draft Bills must be placed in the public domain for a minimum 30-day consultation period before introduction.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping
| Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-I | Role of women and social empowerment; Social empowerment |
| GS-II | Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors; Rights of vulnerable sections; Judicial review; Fundamental rights |
| GS-IV | Probity in governance; Citizen's charter; Transparency and accountability |
Plausible Mains Question Stems
- "The Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019, and its subsequent amendments have been criticised by the community they seek to protect. Critically examine the tension between legislative intent and community rights in the context of the NALSA judgment." (GS-II, 15 marks)
- "Bypassing pre-legislative consultation in sensitive social legislation undermines both constitutional morality and democratic governance. Discuss with reference to recent legislation affecting transgender persons in India." (GS-II, 10 marks)
- "The role of the President in withholding assent to legislation is constitutionally limited but politically significant. Analyse in the context of the Transgender Persons Amendment Bill, 2026." (GS-II, 10 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| NALSA v. Union of India, 2014 | Foundational SC judgment on transgender rights — directly invoked in the controversy. |
| Navtej Singh Johar v. Union of India, 2018 | Broader LGBTQ+ rights trajectory; reading down Sec. 377 IPC. |
| Pre-Legislative Consultation Policy, 2014 | Procedural infirmity cited as main ground for non-assent demand. |
| Article 111 — Presidential assent to Bills | Constitutional mechanism activists are attempting to invoke. |
| Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016 | Comparable framework for vulnerable group legislation; lessons in stakeholder consultation. |
| National Council for Transgender Persons | Its constitution, functions, and the significance of member resignations. |
| Articles 14, 19, 21 and Fundamental Rights jurisprudence | Constitutional basis of the challenge to the medical board provision. |
| Puttaswamy v. Union of India, 2017 (Privacy judgment) | Right to privacy includes identity — bolsters self-identification argument. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong year for the parent Act: The Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act is 2019, not 2016 (which was the Bill that lapsed) and not 2014 (NALSA judgment year).
- Conflating NALSA (2014) with the Act (2019): NALSA is a Supreme Court judgment; the Act is a statute — they are not the same instrument, and the Act was criticised for diluting the NALSA framework.
- Wrong ministry: The implementing ministry is Social Justice and Empowerment, not the Women and Child Development Ministry (a common mix-up for social welfare legislation).
- Presidential assent is not absolute veto: Under Article 111, the President can return the Bill once; if Parliament re-passes it, the President must give assent — activists are seeking a reconsideration, not a permanent block.
- Pre-Legislative Consultation Policy is non-statutory: It is a policy directive of the Law Ministry, not a statute — courts have not uniformly treated its breach as grounds for invalidating a law, though it strengthens procedural fairness arguments.
11. Sources
- [S1] "President urged not to grant assent to Transgender Amendment Bill" — The Hindu, 27 March 2026 print edition (Page 6, International/Main edition) — Article content provided as primary fallback source — (Tier 4)
Note: Web retrieval from Tier 1/2 sources was blocked by domain access restrictions. All statutory, constitutional, and judgmental facts in this note draw on the article excerpt [S1] and established legal record (Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019; NALSA v. Union of India (2014) SC; Article 111; Pre-Legislative Consultation Policy, 2014). Aspirants should cross-verify amendment-specific provisions against PRS India (prsindia.org) and Sansad.in once accessible.